Chris and Sherry Hardie

B&B homesteaders

Opening up a bed and breakfast was the realization of a dream for us. Our long-term goal is to be self-sufficient (we're well on our way) and to be able to share the earth's bounties with our guests.

Saturday, November 6, 2010

Sheep breeding season at the inn


(Colonel Fitzwilliam, left, and Mr. Darcy, right)

September 20th began the same as every other day. I sat in the first window seat of the library, drinking my morning tea as I watched the sheep. I saw one of the Scotty girls riding Fanny or Emma – I couldn’t tell who from that distance. I thought it a bit strange but never gave it another thought – until I went to water the sheep later that morning.
To my alarm I saw that Mr. Darcy was cavorting around the barnyard with the girls. He had broken through the fence where he, Mr. Bingley and our new Suffolk ram Colonel Fitzwilliam were pastured. I realized it was Mr. Darcy, not one of the Scotty girls, that was on top of the sheep I saw earlier that morning.
I was extremely displeased because he had bred one of the Suffolk girls who were intended to be a part of the Colonel’s harem. I had been looking forward to getting some nice Suffolk lambs this coming year from the Colonel and what should have been his girls.
Mr. Darcy is a purebred registered Scottish Blackface ram and he has his own flock of that same breed to mate with. He has no business interfering with the Suffolk girls. I managed to get most of the ewes into the barn and chased Darcy into the pasture where I locked him out.
I found Chris’s father and Josh, our son-in-law, who were able to help fix the fence and get Mr. Darcy back where he belonged. Through the fence he continued to sniff anyone who would approach. Some of the ewes were definitely in heat and he was very determined to get to them. I feared some of the girls would be so obliging as to smash their behinds right up against the fence to help facilitate the illegitimate breeding.
The rams were all moved to the next paddock back to put some distance between them and the ewes.
Many sheep farmers would be breeding sheep at this time – we did last year. But this year we were deliberately delaying, hoping for our lambing season to begin mid-March, after the birth of our first grandchild who is thought to be due around March 3.
I don’t want to be busy playing midwife to sheep giving birth when the baby is arriving. Due to the unfortunate coupling I witnessed, I know at least one lamb is due on February 15.
We managed to keep the ewes safely separated from the rams for three and one-half more weeks. We separated the two flocks, placing the Suffolks in the lower pasture and the Scotties in the upper pasture. Then the appropriate ram was led to each pasture. The Colonel was fitted with a marking harness with a red grease paint type crayon. Whenever he breeds a ewe her backside is marked with the crayon, which eventually washes off. Each day we look for a new red butt, making note of it. The lambs are due five months later.
Last year, our old black ram bred Kitty less than one minute after being led into the girls’ pasture. A new crayon really colors the ewe well. Kitty’s whole backside was covered by the red marker. I had to laugh the next morning when I was preparing breakfast and an anxious guest told me over the cafĂ© doors that he had just come back from a walk on our creek side trail – and he was afraid one of our sheep had been attacked! He thought her whole backside looked as if it were covered in blood!
I smiled as I confirmed to him that, yes, Kitty has been aggressively attacked yesterday – but not by a coyote. It was the ram. (I think he was a little embarrassed when I explained it all.)
Colonel Fitzwilliam was fitted with the harness and Mr. Darcy’s chest was manually chalked up with the crayon because we didn’t have a pin to hold the crayon for the other harness. Unfortunately he is too wild to catch every other day to mark him.
A sheep’s estrus cycle is around every 14 to 17 days. Three weeks in and our two best Suffolks – Kitty and her daughter Fanny – have not been marked, so I’m left with the awful suspicion that Mr. Darcy has impregnated both of them and the offspring of our two prize ewes will be crossbred mutts.
The colonel is only seven or eight months old so it is his first season working as a stud ram. We only have eight Suffolks he has to service. He has a gentle disposition with the ewes, nickering as he sweet talks them into complying with the call of nature. His father was of a gentle disposition which is a big part of why I bought him, hoping he would inherit his amiable demeanor.
Mr. Darcy, on the other hand, is much different. Unlike his namesake, he is no gentleman. When finally released into the Scottie girls’ pasture, he paced up and down the fence dividing the two pastures, pawing and snorting like a Brahma bull. He panted heavily like a rabid dog with his mouth open, his tongue hanging out. His idea of courtship with Marianne was to bash her violently into submission and have his way with her.
The guests are intrigued and fascinated with the goings-on in the barnyard and delight in counting red butts. The first five ewes (after the Valentine lambs) are due around March 9 or 10. Twin lambs are usually up to five days earlier.
Last weekend our daughter Jessica and her husband Josh visited. They brought a DVD copy of their baby’s sonogram, which was neat to be able to watch! (They’re so much clearer than when we were expecting Jessica.) And, oh yeah, it’s likely now that the baby could arrive around March 7 – just in time for lambing season!