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Showing posts from 2009

New House

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We continue to spend all our spare time working on the new house. We expect to move in after this last big push. The house is coming right along now.

A break in the weather, take the young dogs out!

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Farm tour for KHSI Annual Expo

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Even though we only have one purebred Katahdin in our flock, we were one of two commercial hair sheep operations on the 2009 KHSI Annual Expo farm tour. We were told to expect 12 to 15 people, nearly 50 showed up. We also provided a variety of of sheep for their hair classing certification.

Hell Boy is growing

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Hell boy is one of two horned ram lambs that will be available for sale this year.

JLC 1-8

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JLC 1-8 previously pictured as a lamb last year has a grown into a superb animal. As you can see this New Zealand LAI sired yearling is nearly 100 % shed out at the time of this picture.

Breeding Program

Why the long upgrade process to shedding sheep? When we decided to breed the wool off our flock in 1999 (I had some back problems and couldn't shear my own sheep anymore) our flock was primarily a commercial Coopworth flock at that time. Not the best choice to turn into shedding sheep if you're in a hurry perhaps, but with over 25 years of production records running on a grass based, low nutritional plane, about the best low maintenance flock we could have made I think. During those 25+ years, we've seen many fads come and go in the sheep business, the latest, greatest purebreds that are going to revolutionize the sheep industry etc. While most of those fads and the people promoting them have come and gone, we were always open to experimenting with a little of everything that looked promising to our commercial operation during that period. Most importantly though, we scored the results of those experiments on the basis of solid production records. Consequently, it simply wa

Hell Boy

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We have some horns sprouting up in the second generation.

Next Generation

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Ram lamb sired by New Zealand AI project