Hi All,
My husband and I are closing on our first house next week. It is in the Richmond, VA area with 4.3 acres. It has 3 stalls and a grass pasture of approx 1.5 acres. It could be expanded to maybe 2 and some change. Currently there is only permanent wood fencing along the short side closest to the house/road. The rest is electrical.
Thinking maybe 3 sheep to start? Maybe up to 5? I'm cool with either wethers or ewes. No rams.
I am a vet tech with farm animal patient experience. We have gone to the MD sheep and Wool fest for 3 years straight. Husband was in 4H as a kid. But no real "farming" experience lately. He is really into homesteading and has quite the fruit tree and veggie plans for the non animal areas. Planning on runner ducks for eggs as well.
I used to work with what i was told were Scottish Blackface sheep in my teenager years at the local farm shelter. They were perfect! That is what I have always wanted since. But the ewes I worked with didn't have horns.
Ideal Sheep requirements.
-Wool - I want wool sheep. These will be pet/wool producers/lawn mowers. I have started needle felting small creatures and mobiles for gifts. I could potentially learn to make yarn too. But I am not a big sewer/knitter (yet). Ideally like a wool I could dye. But love black faced or one solid black sheep mixed with other lighter sheep. Don't want to deal with lambs, unless they are to keep for more wool.
- Polled- Husband is pretty against horned sheep and I don't want to debud them. He loves the look of them but doesn't want to actually deal with them. But he started to sway on the idea because I keep coming back to the Scottish BlackFace sheep. So in a perfect world our sheep will not have horns. I'm ok with sexually dimorphic horns, then we would just have ewes.
- Size - again husband wants smaller/medium sized sheep. He is still not 100% on animals that might out weigh him.
- wool on face/legs- I would like clean legs and face. I have seen and helped with shearing and holding, but rather not have to deal with wooly face/eyes.
- Ears- I don't like the straight up ears of cheviots or border leicester. I prefer to the side or slightly droopy.
Not sure if there is one breed (or a certain usual mixbreed) that fits all that.
Our possible list is:
Gotlands - concerned the wool is too grey for dying.
Scottish Blackface- horns but i hear there are mules/crossbreeds that are hornless but haven't actually seen anyone with them.
Tunis- not white or black hard time wrapping my head around red faced.
My other idea is to just see what the shelters/CL in the area have that fit my small flock needs.
Any breed that I am not thinking of?
Does our set up sound like it can handle 3-5 non breeding ewes? I need to do more figuring out about rotating smaller pastures and growing our own hay. we could leave them out in the pasture all the time with a run in, or bring them in at night into the stalls.
Thanks!
My husband and I are closing on our first house next week. It is in the Richmond, VA area with 4.3 acres. It has 3 stalls and a grass pasture of approx 1.5 acres. It could be expanded to maybe 2 and some change. Currently there is only permanent wood fencing along the short side closest to the house/road. The rest is electrical.
Thinking maybe 3 sheep to start? Maybe up to 5? I'm cool with either wethers or ewes. No rams.
I am a vet tech with farm animal patient experience. We have gone to the MD sheep and Wool fest for 3 years straight. Husband was in 4H as a kid. But no real "farming" experience lately. He is really into homesteading and has quite the fruit tree and veggie plans for the non animal areas. Planning on runner ducks for eggs as well.
I used to work with what i was told were Scottish Blackface sheep in my teenager years at the local farm shelter. They were perfect! That is what I have always wanted since. But the ewes I worked with didn't have horns.
Ideal Sheep requirements.
-Wool - I want wool sheep. These will be pet/wool producers/lawn mowers. I have started needle felting small creatures and mobiles for gifts. I could potentially learn to make yarn too. But I am not a big sewer/knitter (yet). Ideally like a wool I could dye. But love black faced or one solid black sheep mixed with other lighter sheep. Don't want to deal with lambs, unless they are to keep for more wool.
- Polled- Husband is pretty against horned sheep and I don't want to debud them. He loves the look of them but doesn't want to actually deal with them. But he started to sway on the idea because I keep coming back to the Scottish BlackFace sheep. So in a perfect world our sheep will not have horns. I'm ok with sexually dimorphic horns, then we would just have ewes.
- Size - again husband wants smaller/medium sized sheep. He is still not 100% on animals that might out weigh him.
- wool on face/legs- I would like clean legs and face. I have seen and helped with shearing and holding, but rather not have to deal with wooly face/eyes.
- Ears- I don't like the straight up ears of cheviots or border leicester. I prefer to the side or slightly droopy.
Not sure if there is one breed (or a certain usual mixbreed) that fits all that.
Our possible list is:
Gotlands - concerned the wool is too grey for dying.
Scottish Blackface- horns but i hear there are mules/crossbreeds that are hornless but haven't actually seen anyone with them.
Tunis- not white or black hard time wrapping my head around red faced.
My other idea is to just see what the shelters/CL in the area have that fit my small flock needs.
Any breed that I am not thinking of?
Does our set up sound like it can handle 3-5 non breeding ewes? I need to do more figuring out about rotating smaller pastures and growing our own hay. we could leave them out in the pasture all the time with a run in, or bring them in at night into the stalls.
Thanks!