Young95 wrote: » If u had access to a large area of acreage of good land could a New Zealand type of sheep farming work here ?ino it’s a odd thing to be asking but just curious has anyone ever seen der system in the flesh before? Are there inputs prices close to are cost of fertilizer etc and price they receive for there lambs ?
Dinzee Conlee wrote: » What do you mean by New Zealand type of sheep farming?
Young95 wrote: » YouTube it . Basically low labour . Everything lambs outside no meal fed but high mortality rates .
DJ98 wrote: » Have some nice looking ewe lambs picked out to keep, they are texel x, bred from a 2 star replacement ram, now going by the stars I know these shouldnt be kept but visually theses are real smart looking ewe lambs, any suggestions whether to keep or sell?
390kid wrote: » I’ve bought a few ewes lambing early January, would I want to give them the heptavac jag soon?
Dinzee Conlee wrote: » Did they get the two shots previously do you know? We used to only give the booster shot 4-6 weeks before lambing I think, but they were ewes that had gotten the two shots before...
wrangler wrote: » I usually vaccinate four weeks before lambing, If I had any doubt about bought in sheep I'd inject them twice four to six weeks apart
DJ98 wrote: » Would dung that has been lying in a she'd since last March be rotted enough to be spread onto land? All sheep dung
wrangler wrote: » Just after selling a five year old texel ram that I took from the ewes at 9.30 and put on Donedeal at 10.30. He's related to all my ewes, thought it was a shame to slaughter him That's a record for me anyway,
Bleating Lamb wrote: » He deserved another few months fun:).... Was he still in good physical shape for his new owner?
DJ98 wrote: » Running a ram with a bunch of ewes here (horned ewes), ram has been woth them 5 days and has yet to tip any, ram is raddled, had been with another ram up to this and was working away but has no interest in this group of ewes, any ideas? Only think I can think of is to buy a ram lamb and run him with him, only disadvantage to this 9s that there's just 20 ewes in the group
Young95 wrote: » Any sheep men here renting land how’s the economics of it stacking up ? Is it bps payment just paying the land rent and you have the ground for nothing or are lads able to pay the rent from sheep and keeping the bps ? Just curious as I’m considering renting top class land for 150 an acre but the economics of sheep arnt looking good ? Any advice be much appreciated.
Siamsa Sessions wrote: » Is it fenced? Or adjoining your own place? Have you stock to put on it or would you have to breed/buy more? Back of a fag-box figures: if stocking rate is 4 ewes/acre and you sell 1.5 lambs per ewe you'll have 6 lambs (95 euro avg) or 570 euro per acre output before costs. What are your current costs per ewe? Will they rise if you have to stock/fence the new ground? Best of luck either way but outlook for lamb/beef is not great
Young95 wrote: » Joining are land and is all fenced but the fields are big ! Breeding own replacements and be currently stocked At two ewes to the acre but will go up to three an acre . Are cost of production is low I’d say about 50 euro a head but now 100% sure
wrangler wrote: » A good year here would give us €50/ewe net profit if we averaged 100/lamb, lambing rate 1.6 including ewe lambs, but it's 3years since we farmed properly. You need some BPS to make it worth your while. Our stocking rate was 5ewes/acre....... I wouldn't be shouting that's the right stocking rate either. We didn't reseed but it would have been a help but not at 3ewes/acre. you'd never control the grass