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March 07, 2011

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Your sheep need cowls to go along with their blankets. ;~)

Or maybe bibs . . . .

...or bonnets!

I vote for finishing school for the messy eaters. Then they'd be all ready for tea after their siestas in the sun.

I have my Sheep of Springdelle farm calendar right above my desk here at work, and I notice that Ms. (or Mr.?) March is also quite the messy eater...

Well, at least they look pretty while they're wearing their dinner!

I love the new blue and green coats! Dashing!

I just recently found this blog, and one of the questions my husband asked was about the coats, now I can answer, thank you

I've heard of people using compressed air to clean the sheep before shearing. And those people said it worked. Some even said they washed their sheep in the days before a shearing. Would you say that doesn't really work to the degree you're wanting? Or does that stuff just not work?

I've heard of shepherds trying all kinds of things. Feeding on the ground, feeding haylage vs. hay. Sheep covers are the single most effective measures we've found for raising clean fleece.

Compressed air is an interesting thought. I've seen people using air to "dust off" show sheep before entering the ring. Not sure how well that would work on full-fleeced critters. Also, our Cormo fleeces are so dense and sticky with lanolin, I'm not sure how effective it would be.

One year, in the days before we used sheep covers, I tried using a shop vac on the sheep pre-shearing. Not only did it not work, but the sheep really didn't care for it.

Bathing before shearing? Not practical here. Fleece is more easily washed off the sheep (plus fleeces really need to be dry, dry, dry for the shearer to shear the animals safely).

Thank you for raising two very good thoughts, I appreciate it.

What brand of covers do you use? are some better than others?

I don't suppose using hoods, like the kind available for horses, would be practical nor cost effective in keeping the neck and chest wool clean. They'd be a sight, though, like little Halloween trick or treaters
;-).

Here's a preview link to a sewing pattern for different sized horses. http://preview.tinyurl.com/6fe67yr

So, do llamas not have these concerns as much? No to using llama coats? They don't look as messy, since they reach out for their food more...

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