Hi neighbors, please help me with my plans to get into
dairy sheep. Here is what I have so far.
I need a small
project for next year, to learn how to care for sheep in general, and to teach my dog, who is an
LGD, but who is also a dufus, how to be with sheep. We will need to add another dog when he figures out what is going on. So I'm thinking three wether sheep or lambs to start. Maybe Icelandics because they do well in cold, don't need shearing, and are somewhat small. Eventually I would like a dairy breed to make and
sell cheese.
We have a very small fenced area planned for a pen by the shop, which is near the house, 40 x 40, next to the lean-to which will serve as a barn. The low temperature in the five years we've lived here has been in the -30s, so we'll have a fully enclosed area for winter that opens onto the pen for nicer weather. They will be in from November through May, roughly, due to snow and wet soils in the pasture.
For pasture, we have about 5 acres of wet areas for paddocks, where a lot of alder, cottonwood, and hardhack (pink spirea) grow.
Cattle were ranged there previously (like 50 years ago) and there are still areas where really tall grass grows, like 8' tall, mixed in with tansy and some poisonous herbs like cow parsnip and wild angelica. I'm hoping that rotationally grazing sheep will encourage a better mix of pasture grass and forbs (after we pull the poisonous ones.) I'd like to
fence a little more each year, and keep the sheep in their pen between rotations until
enough pasture is established. Do you think they will eat the spirea? Maybe if we take a machete and brush hog and coppice it for them?
We have all the predators, but neighbors use dogs with their stock and it works well. We have so many mosquitoes that I don't even want to go down that way from May until August, but I'm hoping that taking down the brush and tall grass will decrease the amount of mosquitoes. The ground does dry out. The walk to the pastures is long, so that will make milking take a long time, but there is a hydrant down there, and one by the barn.
Anything else to think about?
Should I think about a cow instead? We've considered goats but we're trying to keep our cedar
trees alive, and may try to plant black walnuts in the pastures. Also my husband has kept goats before and doesn't care for the billies lol. Thank you neighbors!