having a sheep person close is a great resource.
you have to breed every year. One ram can handle around 30 ewes from what ive read.
Artificial insemination is laproscopic surgery in sheep, which makes it impractical.
If you could bring your ewes to your neighbors at breeding time or share a ram it would save you a lot of headaches.
Rams can get mean or at least very pushy. It's much more enjoyable around here when Jethroe goes to visit Uncle Phil for the spring and summer.
Wool sheep usually go into heat in the fall (every 17 days fall-winter) and have a 4.5-5 month gestation depending on breed. Hair sheep can come in season anytime (usually)
after 3-4 weeks i am going to separate the babies for 8ish hours and creep
feed them, milk the mommas and put them back together. That way we all benefit from the milk and if i can't milk for a day or 2 i don't have to worry about mastitis, won't get as much milk but are not tied to 2x a day milking.
i do feed a little grain (candy to a sheep) to keep them coming to me and to get to go where i want them. They don't like to be milked at first so if they are eating they are happier. if they are "trapped" in a stanchion or corner they usually calm down and get used to being milked. a 100lb sheep is a whole lot easier to deal with than a 1,000lb cow. Paul has a
video on his Youtube channel for a pallet stanchion.
I think good quality pasture is good
enough as long as it is diverse and has legumes. Read Adam Klaus's posts, he has a lot of good info (for cows but it applies to sheep)
You will probably need some good quality mixed legume
hay for the winter to keep up their body condition and or get your rotational grazing/stock piling down to a science (still working on this).
The other big reason to rotate pastures is Barber pole worms. Hair sheep are more resistant (not immune). I almost lost my 2 Icelandics to worms last year because i did not move them soon enough. copper bolus worked on them. The eggs hatch in warm/wet (rain or heavy dew) 3 weeks after they are passed. in optimum conditions and can persist, waiting for optimum conditions for a year from what i have read. so move to a new pasture every 3 weeks (or sooner) and don't let them back for at least 30 days.
Its been fun talking about sheep! most people think i am crazy for milking sheep, digging ditches (swales) and worrying about sectioning off pastures.
Good luck!