arctictree wrote: » Lads, just had a ewe lamb (1 year old) with twins. Would ye always take one off her?
charolais0153 wrote: » Its probably best to take one off her if you can. She would need a lot of feed. .5kg day at least
wrangler wrote: » With good grass as well. We got a refractometer last week to test the immunogloblin levels in the colostrum and every ewe lambed (apart from an abortion) so far is above the maximum reading so grennans ration is delivering the goods
charolais0153 wrote: » Thats probably as good as test as any for quality. Would there be any immunoglobin in powdered colostrum?
ganmo wrote: » there'd be some but nowhere near the levels in proper colostrum. Wrangler the refractometers is measuring solids which is a good guide of quality colostrum but not definite.
Dickie10 wrote: » these things happen! on the bright side you have six healthy lambs be worse if you lost two or three of them as well
arctictree wrote: » Well just had a ewe lamb triplets in the field. The same ewe that I found in the shed two weeks ago with 3 lambs under her and no milk. She must have stolen the lambs and I didn't cop it. Still has no milk so now I have 6 pet lambs from her! And an empty ewe somewhere in the shed with loads of milk probably!
charolais0153 wrote: » Very few live triplets this year there seems to be always something with one of them
kk.man wrote: » On annual leave now for two weeks!...Lambing started yesterday (140 days) 😰. Can't wait...happy out!...hallelujah. I love to farm full time but don't have enough arces.
arctictree wrote: » Is 2 weeks enough? I started lambing 2 weeks ago and am only half way through now.
stantheman1979 wrote: » Sorry I’m not getting you. So a triplet lambed 2 weeks ago and you thought it was a different ewe and left the 3 lambs on her until now with no milk and now she’s had her own 3 lambs and still has no milk. You’re messing surely
kk.man wrote: » It worked out ok for last two years but that's the most I can get off.
Cran wrote: » Anyone know of a good trained dog for sale?
arctictree wrote: » Lads, do ye ever let a ewe lamb rare twins? Or is it a false economy? Bought a dozen big ewe lambs off a neighbour last autumn. They all went in lamb and half have twins.
wrangler wrote: » We would if there wasn't a ewe to foster on to, they'd be fine, have them well fed before they lamb, doubles are unlikely to get too big in them, We'd usually give them meal in a seperate batch for a month after they lamb A neighbour here that'd have a lot of ewe lambs with doubles would use a creep feeder for the doubles and let both ewes and lambs into it.