6 Reasons to Add Sheep to Your Homestead [especially for first-timers]

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  • Опубликовано: 26 дек 2024

Комментарии • 163

  • @Cat-oj2th
    @Cat-oj2th Год назад +17

    We are zoned for residential ag and we just got sheep in may. They’ve been a joy!!!!

  • @Milehighsheppard
    @Milehighsheppard 8 месяцев назад +10

    I have Dorper sheep too on 5 acres in CA at 6000 ft. Very easy to raise and they are great land clearers. Love the clip with the Ram, mine sent me to hospital once.

  • @g.attable1983
    @g.attable1983 2 года назад +26

    Last year I used cow manure...this year sheep manure....a huge difference on how cedars, grass grew so much better then last year.

  • @robertmartin2394
    @robertmartin2394 Год назад +32

    I’m glad I found EweTube

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  Год назад +4

      😂 You win the pun of the day award! That would have been a good channel name.

  • @hornitorrincoperezoso2189
    @hornitorrincoperezoso2189 11 месяцев назад +15

    Also important for small scale homesteads: your leach field may cover a substantial part of the property; if you want to let your animals use that area, cows are too heavy and will seriously damage the septic lines. Sheep are small enough to walk on the leach field, just like a person. Even if you have an aerobic system and no leach field, the weight of a cow standing on the tank could collapse it.

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  11 месяцев назад +3

      Yes! I've been a fan of keeping sheep on a septic field. It's a win for the sheep, and that way you're making use of otherwise dead space. AND you don't have to mow it!

  • @jeannemoore9792
    @jeannemoore9792 Год назад +12

    So happy to find another sheep lover.😊 We are doing about the same as you and I love the sheep. They often ignore the hay I throw to them and prefer to browse our field. I find that our field raised lamb tastes way better than the butcher lamb I purchased a few years back. Watching sheep in the field is one of the most peaceful things in my life.😊

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  Год назад +1

      There's no better sound than when sheep tear up grass. I love it!

  • @davefletch3063
    @davefletch3063 Год назад +106

    And…they help you sleep

    • @MikeCheckBiloxi
      @MikeCheckBiloxi 10 месяцев назад +2

      Ha! I see what you did there

    • @connorhart7597
      @connorhart7597 9 месяцев назад +7

      Wonder if you gotta train em to jump over the bed or if they'll do that instinctively....

    • @abdullahi4258
      @abdullahi4258 Месяц назад +1

      U gotta start counting them

  • @elijahsanders3547
    @elijahsanders3547 Год назад +11

    Thank you for this great video :) Chickens are foragers, and they can help keep your pasture clean. Deep layer of wood mulch can give feed, as well as a compost/manure pile. In the winter, also heard of old timers killing a small animal, cutting it open, and throwing it to the chickens.

  • @chessman483
    @chessman483 2 года назад +34

    A Herd “ sheep are a flock” sheared “ is said Shorn. I’m from New Zealand where we have 10 sheep for every human, so these terms are used daily. Also I’m an x shearer.
    I also raise Dorpers and love them. Mine lamb every 8 months, that suits my climate because our grass grows all year as long as we don’t get a prolonged drought. Being originally from NZ I wasn’t use to Dorpers, all the sheep I fattened there were Romney’s or Texels. I certainly prefer the Dorpers.

    • @gretchengodwin
      @gretchengodwin 2 года назад

      Do you eat your sheep?

    • @chessman483
      @chessman483 2 года назад +3

      @@gretchengodwin yes, but only the males. But our numbers are growing so fast. So we will have to start selling some of the Ewes in about a year.

  • @tob_arts
    @tob_arts 6 месяцев назад +3

    i dont plan on homesteading, at least anytime soon. but sheep are my favorite animal. thanks for the reaffirmation about that.

  • @jaebrunetti2268
    @jaebrunetti2268 Год назад +6

    This is a true story about a remarkable lady
    This was the newspaper story when she died.
    We all knew and loved her.
    Willoughby, Ohio
    Willoughby - The 'sheep lady' died as she lived, tenderly tending her
    suburban flock.
    Police found the body of Dorothea Davis, 90, Tuesday afternoon at the
    bottom of a ravine at the west end of her 13.5-acre sheep farm on
    Euclid Avenue. She had not been seen for nearly a week, and the Lake
    County coroner ruled that she had died of a heart attack.
    On Wednesday afternoon, some six dozen sheep huddled against a lean-to
    behind her farmhouse. Meanwhile, members of a Lake County community
    heralded their enigmatic shepherdess.Davis, a wispy and weathered loner, was sort of a city symbol. For
    decades, the retired librarian from one of Willoughby's oldest
    families remained a rustic holdout on the west end of the burgeoning
    city, declining to sell her valuable land to developers or the city.
    "She was born on that property, lived the way she wanted all these
    years and she always said she wanted to die there," Willoughby Mayor
    Dave Anderson said. "I'm sad that she's gone, but glad for that, at
    least."
    A close friend, Bob Engert, 71, of Willowick, reported Davis missing
    to police on Tuesday morning. He had fed Davis' sheep for several
    years but hadn't seen Davis since Dec. 31.
    Her life on the Willoughby sheep farm was lived amidst both splendor
    and squalor. Her run-down, thrice-burned, two-century-old home sits on
    a narrow strip of land squeezed between a mobile home park and
    condominiums and across Euclid Avenue from a General Electric plant.
    The city received complaints each year about the smell or sight of the
    farm and often had officers rounding up the sheep off a busy Euclid
    Avenue, Anderson said.
    But her bucolic barnyard was also a respite for generations of
    families who found Davis cooing to her sheep by their pet names:
    lambies, babies and baa-baas.
    "I think she was a lovely, sweet lady who loved her sheep," said Mary
    Leiderbach, a Willoughby library worker.
    Dorothea Davis was born June 10, 1913, the second of four daughters,
    and grew up on the family farm.She took over the farm in the early 1950s after her father died, and
    lived alone on the land since 1971, when her mother died, according to reports.
    Twice, after disasters on the farm, the community cared for the lady
    who cared for the sheep.
    In 1968, when Davis was charged by police with having nearly two dozen
    sheep carcasses strewn about the property, friends responded by
    repairing her fence and digging a burial trench for the carcasses.
    And when the city condemned her house after a 1999 fire, an army of
    volunteers and city officials alike rebuilt the farmhouse according to
    code -- this time without a fireplace.
    Anderson said he played both enforcer and friend that year. "We
    probably weren't as tough on her as we would have been with others,"
    he admitted. "But most of the community wanted her to stay. We helped
    with that, but we also wanted to protect her from herself."
    Anderson said Davis' farm now could easily be sold for more than $1 million.
    Willoughby officials had tried to buy the Davis farm in 1982 to turn
    it into a park or children's petting zoo, according to reports.
    Davis wasn't interested and often had said she would fight development
    of her land as long as she lived.
    In 1990, she claimed she had set up a trust so the land will go to her
    sisters when she died. Her sister Marjorie could not be reached at her
    Breckenridge Village residence.
    Engert said he expected that Marjorie Davis would take ownership of
    the property, but he said he plans to keep caring for the sheep.
    "I'm going to miss [Dorothea], but I'm glad she died on the farm," he
    said. "She got her blessing anyhow."

  • @fairviewhomestead
    @fairviewhomestead 3 года назад +10

    Just bought our first Katadin/dorp mix two weeks ago! Miriam is such a sweet girl. Working on getting her a mate but she has been keepin it real with the goats. Haha! Thanks for the info and help from your videos!

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  3 года назад

      That's such a great cross! Congrats! Good luck finding a ram.

  • @ruefulquail5071
    @ruefulquail5071 3 года назад +18

    I just got my first sheep. It is fantastic to see the fence line getting cleaned up and I didn't have to grab a tool. I did go with a ram though since the nearest breeder is 2.5 hours one way. I just didn't want a large breed since they will be on top of my mound septic system.

  • @gyrene94
    @gyrene94 2 года назад +9

    Thank you for sharing your experience and knowledge. You came up in my feed and have opened my eyes to things I didn't know and wouldn't have considered. You have been a gateway to push us to diversify.
    Thank you for sharing and being an inspiration! Keep up the good work...and THANKS AGAIN!

  • @homesteadingpastor
    @homesteadingpastor Год назад +4

    Thank you for this very informative video! We just added sheep to our homestead, and we have already been wondering why we haven’t added sheep before now, we love em. Btw, New Subscriber Here From South Carolina!

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  Год назад +1

      Glad to have you around! Sheep are lovely. I filmed this video when I lived in Utah, but now I'm in North Carolina. Howdy neighbor!

    • @homesteadingpastor
      @homesteadingpastor Год назад +1

      @@homesteadingwithPJ howdy! Wow, didn’t realize we were neighbors. Yes we love raising sheep now that we’ve got them.

  • @jjohnsengraciesmom
    @jjohnsengraciesmom Год назад +11

    They are loud. They could be singers in a heavy metal band.

  • @karenchavez9996
    @karenchavez9996 8 месяцев назад +3

    They also do well keeping the weeds down. We raise sheep rather than a steer as they are smaller and we are able to process them ourselves and don’t have to pay for a butcher to process them. We also raise rabbits as they are easier then chickens for meat.

  • @moejoth
    @moejoth 2 года назад +2

    7:28 that lamb was like dafuq did you just say?

  • @jjohnsengraciesmom
    @jjohnsengraciesmom Год назад +3

    Your video is great.

  • @collisjohnson4576
    @collisjohnson4576 3 года назад +5

    Nice video. Hoping to get some sheep for myself soon.

  • @sarahbroussard7489
    @sarahbroussard7489 Год назад +3

    Yo, that treehouse at 4:11 is lit.

  • @SuerteDelMolinoFarm
    @SuerteDelMolinoFarm Год назад +1

    Greetings from the LooseNatural farm in Andalusia Spain where we currently look into buying sheep

  • @garypiatt4666
    @garypiatt4666 2 года назад +2

    What a fantastic video!!!!
    Thank you so very much!

  • @djja8844
    @djja8844 Год назад +2

    Im glad to hear you're finding it easy. It seems like people often have problems with sheep dying from parasites

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  Год назад +3

      I've lost sheep to parasites since filming this video. It does happen. But I haven't had any losses in almost two years now.

  • @navarrohillsranch
    @navarrohillsranch Год назад +5

    You are spot on with the cow vs sheep land carrying capacity. In our area 1 cow unit is equal to 6 sheep units which means I can have 6 sheep in the same space as 1 cow. A cow will produce 1 calf every 285 days while the sheep will usually have twins in 5 months which will give you 12 lambs. 1 lamb in our area will sell for a minimum of $200 ($3 per pound) at weaning equaling $2400. The cow with its 1 calf will go to market at 500lbs and bring on average $1.20 per pound equaling $600. Also, cows eat a lot of grain!

  • @iam_zeus875
    @iam_zeus875 2 года назад +1

    This content was so wholesome 🤣🤣🤣

  • @philwhite5815
    @philwhite5815 Месяц назад +1

    What kind of fencing do you use

  • @justinsellers9402
    @justinsellers9402 2 года назад +2

    That's a cool tree house.

  • @lauram8252
    @lauram8252 5 месяцев назад

    Great video! Can’t wait to get my first sheep🤍

  • @Jozayaagrotv
    @Jozayaagrotv Год назад +1

    Thanks for sharing this Educative content 👍

  • @Kevlarel84
    @Kevlarel84 Год назад +6

    I've found that friends and family that say they don't like lamb had a bad experience with it at some point. It might have been the wrong breed but it also could have been age. Older sheep that are butchered also have a real gamey taste that really smells up the house when cooked. Mutton(older sheep) was a staple with our European ancestors but it has never been popular in North America. I grew up in farm country in the midwest and my family didn't eat lamb nor did most of my friends families. It's a shame it isn't more popular. It's a good meat source with health benefits and would likely be more economically priced if it wasn't such a specialty in my area. I love lamb and would like to have it more often than just once in a great while as I currently do. I can't stand mutton though. To me the older sheep tastes and smells like burnt hair! lol

    • @navarrohillsranch
      @navarrohillsranch Год назад +5

      Wool sheep meat (which is what is found in a lot of grocery stores) have a "gamey" taste due to the oil from the wool. Hair sheep produce meat that does not have that oil and thus is a great tasting product. To me it is a sweeter tender meat and is also low in cholesterol. Older hair sheep rams can be butchered and still have the same great taste as the younger rams.

  • @alexandramoore3052
    @alexandramoore3052 4 месяца назад +1

    What do you do with the manure?

  • @Smallwondersfarm
    @Smallwondersfarm 2 года назад +2

    Thank you! Great information!

  • @TheToddFather1969
    @TheToddFather1969 3 года назад +19

    How do you have a homestead next to a subdivision? Suburbanites are usually very uptight and don’t like farms next to them.

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  3 года назад +41

      Good question. The short answer: My zoning protected me.
      I was literally zoned as residential agriculture. They may have a problem with noise (roosters, sheep), but as far as being "allowed to do it" there's nothing they could do to stop me. I was 100% legal in my zoning. Plus when you give everyone a pound of grass-fed lamb or a dozen eggs every so often, you make good neighbors. I never had complaints.

    • @TheToddFather1969
      @TheToddFather1969 3 года назад +15

      @@homesteadingwithPJ Thays awesome. I’m happy for you. Where I live suburbanites move in and demand everything around them that they don’t like be shut down. Usually the local government complies.

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  3 года назад +3

      @@TheToddFather1969 Good luck!

    • @OurFreeSociety
      @OurFreeSociety 2 года назад +1

      @@TheToddFather1969 - where do you live?

    • @TheToddFather1969
      @TheToddFather1969 2 года назад +2

      @@OurFreeSociety North Carolina, the land of subdivisions and regulations.

  • @peterpepper2983
    @peterpepper2983 8 месяцев назад

    Freezer camp... lol. You're vids are awesome

  • @jaimewolfe185
    @jaimewolfe185 2 года назад +2

    We are starting out with no pasture. Fence in a small area... clear trees. Add more fence, clear more trees...

  • @pabloescoba713
    @pabloescoba713 Год назад +3

    The best animal ever

  • @johanrunfeldt7174
    @johanrunfeldt7174 2 года назад +3

    Sheep puts the ram in RAM-bunctious.

  • @lhatfield0786
    @lhatfield0786 Год назад +1

    PJ you explain things so clearly (and it helps you come from a non-ag background). Can you help me find keywords so I can more research? I'm not homesteading, just living on 5 acres with lots of pines and rocks, very steep can not use a mower at all, want to get 3 hair-sheep wethers to forage and keep down grass and weeds. All the videos seem to aim toward bigger operations and meat production. I think I want to keep the sheep longer as working pets? Or should I get new wethers every spring and sell them in fall? I just found out there is not much lamb processing in Colorado. Thank you!

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  Год назад

      I only have 6 acres in production now, so you're not far off with 5 acres. I would get some weathers or rams in the spring and process in the late winter.
      Thanks for the kind words!

  • @carlyleporter5388
    @carlyleporter5388 2 года назад

    I don't have any city raised cousins with as little understanding of living on a farm as this guy.

  • @lorinash4772
    @lorinash4772 Год назад +2

    Looking @ trying milking next lambing season to be totally self efficient

  • @Mysfit_Oasis
    @Mysfit_Oasis 2 года назад +2

    when my male sheep Bo gets head butty (He played with a cow as a baby) I just have to grab a stick I think he sees it and thinks its my horn and he will back off. he used to head butt very hard... would knock you down if you werent paying attention. but ive been working with him and he is starting to learn that humans are for pets and scratches and not for head butting :)

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  2 года назад

      Stay safe! Rams cause more damage than people know. Don't turn your back on a ram! Good luck.

  • @tylertollow5210
    @tylertollow5210 8 месяцев назад

    Hey nice hat dog. I got the same one!

  • @Highlander1911
    @Highlander1911 Год назад +1

    Really great video! Would it be possible to have wool sheep on a small scale like this?

  • @BornFreeFilms
    @BornFreeFilms 8 месяцев назад

    Your videos have finally inspired me to get into sheep instead of cattle. The round bales of hay here in the Dallas, Tx area start at $95 and go up to $160. Just can't afford a bale a week for a herd of 6 on my 12 acres. Do you know a good, safe place to get soME Dorpers near Dallas? I tend to trust you. How much should some weaned ewes and a non-related ram cost each?

  • @jack0903
    @jack0903 2 года назад +1

    I like lamb that's why I'm getting them.

  • @OurFreeSociety
    @OurFreeSociety 2 года назад +2

    I didn't understand how they help the chickens.
    Can you clarify please.
    Thanks for the video.

  • @ivyg3477
    @ivyg3477 Год назад +2

    Well I'm sold lol

  • @bluegrasstransport5266
    @bluegrasstransport5266 Год назад +1

    Are sheep loud at night, or do they sleep all night. And just loud during the day.

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  Год назад +1

      They are quiet... usually. If your sheep are spoiled, like mine were at this time, they see you and bleet!

  • @country2thesoul277
    @country2thesoul277 Год назад +1

    Is cattle panel fencing suitable for sheep?

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  Год назад

      Yes! Although it an be expensive if you're doing it for a long distance. But if it doesn't break the bank for you, it will work very well.

    • @country2thesoul277
      @country2thesoul277 Год назад +2

      @@homesteadingwithPJ Right on! I’ve been working towards enclosing my 5 acre pasture for a couple of years. I’m 31 cattle panels away from having it finished. Watching your channel has inspired me to want to try my luck with dorper sheep. Thanks for sharing all your knowledge and expertise!

  • @bvhia
    @bvhia 4 месяца назад

    My dream!! 😭😭 Sheepies!!! One day!!

  • @villagesheepkm1276
    @villagesheepkm1276 2 года назад +1

    Good

  • @brewsterly2927
    @brewsterly2927 8 месяцев назад +4

    Very overstocked with 4 sheep on 1/2 acre. No rotation, high worm load.

  • @williamgardner8105
    @williamgardner8105 3 месяца назад

    Where u located

  • @HansWick
    @HansWick 3 года назад +3

    I have 2.5 acres, I'm going to fence off about 1 acre for sheep. Do you try to section the area off to rotate them around or just let them go where they please?

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  2 года назад +6

      I do that now, the land and the animals do better with rotational grazing.

  • @johnschwartz6941
    @johnschwartz6941 2 года назад +1

    What kind of hay is that you are feeding them?

  • @jessicawagley03
    @jessicawagley03 2 года назад +2

    Do you keep your ram by itself or do you have two rams? Being that they are social, I didn’t know what is the best practice.

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  2 года назад +5

      I usually keep the ram with the ram lambs most of the year, so he's only alone for a few weeks out of the year.

  • @laniegonewild
    @laniegonewild Год назад +1

    How much hay for the winter

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  Год назад

      That's a tough question. I plan for a bale a week, per sheep. And then add another 10-20 bales to that number!

  • @ddubsr5886
    @ddubsr5886 2 года назад +7

    I’m wondering if your making a mistake not rotational grazing them. The grass looks too over eaten and thus you increase parasite risk and why they are eating sticks and leaves instead of grass. Tip and dip as they say

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  2 года назад +7

      Agreed, we moved across the country to a much larger property. We rotationally graze when we can now.

  • @aprilcharter9926
    @aprilcharter9926 3 года назад +3

    Are ticks a problem in livestock animals? I don't know really much about farming, but I know around my area the deer tend to have a lot of them.

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  3 года назад +2

      They are always a concern, but sheep seem to be more resilient than deer. I think the wool helps. I've never had problems, but I know some people have tick problems. I'm not sure what parts of the US/world are better/worse for them though.

    • @aprilcharter9926
      @aprilcharter9926 3 года назад

      @@homesteadingwithPJ Interesting! Maybe some of the wool is too dense. Thanks for the reply :)

  • @richardconcha7159
    @richardconcha7159 2 года назад +1

    HOW WELL DO THEY HANDLE THE HEAT

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  2 года назад

      Just fine, so long as they are shorn. But humidity and heat makes for lots of worms, which Dorper are not excellent at beating.

  • @emilymcmakin8698
    @emilymcmakin8698 Год назад +1

    So can these sheep, that you use for meat, also be milked to make dairy products?

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  Год назад

      Technically, yes. But these are not great for that. There are other varieties of sheep (Friesians for example) that are much more docile and good milkers. Both traits come from being bred for that for hundreds of years.

  • @rollinwiththeflow2174
    @rollinwiththeflow2174 2 года назад +1

    I’m in west TN. New homesteader Where can I buy a 3 Dorpers?

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  2 года назад

      The website used to have pages by state, although I don't see that on their site right now. dorpersheep.org/
      I would join a Dorper Facebook group and start asking.

    • @cherylstewart9847
      @cherylstewart9847 2 года назад

      If you have craigslist, that is a good place to look.

  • @gumboot65
    @gumboot65 3 года назад +1

    How are Dorper sheep for a cold climate like Interior Alaska ?
    Do they do well if the have to be on hay for 8 months a year ?

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  3 года назад

      I believe they would. Despite being from South Africa, they put on a lot of wool when it's cold. Mine in Utah did fine, they don't mind dry cold. However Utah and Alaska are two different kinds of cold, the coldest I saw was in the teens, Alaska I'm sure would be much colder. So I can't say for sure.
      But as far as hay goes, they do well on it. Mine would thrive on alfalfa, especially while pregnant.

  • @cloudcastle338
    @cloudcastle338 2 года назад

    Wtf lol I thought I was watching snake discovery for a second because they use that same sound for their intro too 😂

  • @ramamusah9524
    @ramamusah9524 2 года назад +1

    Pls how many weeks do sheep give birth

  • @madisonjane9865
    @madisonjane9865 5 месяцев назад

    Do they need shelter?

  • @arjunchhantyal5061
    @arjunchhantyal5061 2 года назад +1

    I want buy how to buy i am from Nepal

  • @jscritters5579
    @jscritters5579 2 года назад +1

    I have been thinking about a sheep to live with my 3 goats. Are they proned to external parisites? I have my goats in a paddock with no grass and a little shed the winter months and switch them in and out of a of a paddock with LOTS of grass and weeds. Do you think that would be a good adviorment for a sheep? Thanks

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  2 года назад

      Goats and sheep can coexist. On a typical pasture, goats will probably get hit with parasites before sheep. But if the goats are eat weeds or shrubs (browsing over foraging) the sheep are more likely to get parasites.

    • @jscritters5579
      @jscritters5579 2 года назад

      @@homesteadingwithPJ Thank you! My goats have been dewormed and seem happy. Maybe I'll think about a sheep friend at some point Thanks again!!!! 😀 My biggest worry with getting sheep is if they were to get lice. Can't stand lice🤣 but I don't think they just show up out of nowhere

  • @mrs.sparks3363
    @mrs.sparks3363 2 года назад +1

    How many sheep should I get?

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  2 года назад

      Depends... If you're just starting out with sheep, I suggest actually getting a handful of wean rams and finishing them out your first year rather than jumping right into breeding sheep year round.

  • @AnimeDreamingEcchi
    @AnimeDreamingEcchi 8 месяцев назад

    Do they eat cud weed

  • @ambercrombie789
    @ambercrombie789 3 года назад +1

    Can you compare people who raise sheep to those who raise cattle?

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  3 года назад

      Check out this video. It's not from me, but it's a great one on the subject of sheep vs. cows.
      ruclips.net/video/MNeglsSWLYE/видео.html

    • @ambercrombie789
      @ambercrombie789 3 года назад

      @@homesteadingwithPJ Thank you so much.

  • @Death2Compromise
    @Death2Compromise 6 месяцев назад

    Do you think fallen acorns are a concern for sheep?

  • @ninoadp100
    @ninoadp100 4 месяца назад

    But how do sheep differ than goats? I plan on getting goats for the milk. I haven’t heard people drinking drinking sheep milk.

    • @HladniSjeverniVjetar
      @HladniSjeverniVjetar 3 месяца назад +1

      You have sheep that are bred for milk. You have sheep that bred for wool,meat and milk and then you have sheep that bred for meat only. Same as with cows...
      Goats are a bit more crazy and can climb wherever they want plus they will eat everything but there is enough information on the internet and YT so best thing is to start searching.

  • @josephramos9891
    @josephramos9891 2 месяца назад

    Hey PJ can a dorper be too fat to get pregnant?

  • @johnfolk1448
    @johnfolk1448 2 года назад +1

    No milking for kefir milk?

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  2 года назад

      I don't do it, but I love hearing about other folks that do it!

  • @makingawesome8730
    @makingawesome8730 2 года назад +1

    How do you handle parasite loads on a small field like that? The new fad seems to be moving every couple days at the longest. Trying to understand if it's really necessary

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  2 года назад

      There's a lot of factors, bred, season, forage quality, and climate matter a lot. In Utah, when I filmed this, we didn't do any deworming, and were fine. Hard dry winters and hot dry summers do the trick just fine.
      However, I'm in North Carolina now and we have to move sheep often. Right now I'm doing 5-7 days in a single spot. But I know many people around me move even more frequently, daily sometimes.

  • @HomesteadAlabama
    @HomesteadAlabama 2 года назад +1

    Thank you but looking in the sheep I have chickens as well

  • @squaresofpaper
    @squaresofpaper 3 года назад +2

    Do you milk your sheep? If not, I'm curious why... is this not a good breed for milking? You didn't mention anything about that. Sheep seem like a great option, over goats... but I would really love a dairy and meat animal.

    • @familyfarmlivestock4949
      @familyfarmlivestock4949 3 года назад +1

      You'll want an East Fresian or a Lacaune sheep for milking. Try East Fresian first. Watch Way Out West, it's an Irish couple's channel, they milk a few sheep.

    • @squaresofpaper
      @squaresofpaper 3 года назад

      @@familyfarmlivestock4949 Thank you, I'll definitely look into those breeds and that channel!

    • @summerlove0426
      @summerlove0426 3 года назад

      l’d like to know that as well, milking specific to the dorp breed. Than you!!

  • @2potornot2pot
    @2potornot2pot 3 года назад +3

    Do you butcher your own sheep?

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  3 года назад +5

      No, maybe one day in the distant future. But it's hard enough for me to drop them off at the butcher as it is.

    • @PurpleTreeFish
      @PurpleTreeFish 2 года назад

      @@homesteadingwithPJ how much does an average sheep cost to butcher in total?

    • @pretzeltwisttwist7740
      @pretzeltwisttwist7740 Год назад

      ​@@homesteadingwithPJHow did you find your butcher? I'm in western NC, are you open to visitors coming and learning about your sheep raising techniques? We are new St. Croix sheep owners.

  • @Dorperchannel31rus
    @Dorperchannel31rus 3 года назад +2

    👍👍👍👍👍🐏🐑🐏🐑

  • @IVidible1493
    @IVidible1493 4 месяца назад

    100,000th veiw

  • @charlieboggs5210
    @charlieboggs5210 10 месяцев назад +1

    I want some just so I have some more things for my dog to protect than just my dumb crazy chickens lol I think dog has had it with them and so I can stop brush hogging and mowing 4 acres out of 40 for a yard so sick of wasting money and time mowing when I could have mowers I could eat vs mowers I have to feed 4 dollar a gallon diesel fuel and I could be making money instead of riding a depreciating tractor

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  10 месяцев назад

      Hair sheep (like the Dorper) are great at bush control, because they will eat most any kind of vegetation. I'm told that wool sheep are pickier eaters, eating only grass if they can help it.

    • @charlieboggs5210
      @charlieboggs5210 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@homesteadingwithPJ sound like what I need

  • @rassanzedkyakre
    @rassanzedkyakre 3 года назад +1

    They are my favorite too . Go to my channel our sheep are different from yours already subscribed your channel and would keep watching your videos hopefully we can exchange information about the sheep . What breed of sheep are those ?

  • @bethuelkiprono6139
    @bethuelkiprono6139 Год назад

    Life ni life hata huku Kenya ni hivo

  • @kevinstreeter6943
    @kevinstreeter6943 2 месяца назад

    My reasons for not liking sheep.
    1. Shearing
    2. Docking tails.
    3. Limited breeding season
    4. Lambs dying
    5. Aggressive rams.
    6. Lambs born in winter.
    7. Limited market, not everyone likes lamb.
    8. Teeth problems.
    9. Feet problems.
    10. Eat near poop, parasites.
    11. Stink.
    12. Too loud.
    13. There are stupid.
    14. Hogs are better

  • @stevelevesque3274
    @stevelevesque3274 2 года назад

    pro-biotics - that the funniest thing i've heard today - thank you

  • @raymondhusser2189
    @raymondhusser2189 6 месяцев назад

    Isn’t that a million dollar home in the background?? You are not homesteading, you are just having fun.

  • @brandonderijk587
    @brandonderijk587 3 года назад +1

    sell that ram

    • @homesteadingwithPJ
      @homesteadingwithPJ  3 года назад

      Haha. We did. He wasn't great. Our ram is much more what you want in a stud ram. Really good champion genetics. You have a good eye!

  • @giovanni545
    @giovanni545 Год назад +1

    Look at this verse please
    Revelation 14:12
    12 Here is the patience of the saints: here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.

  • @PShabx2
    @PShabx2 Год назад

    Frozen camp! Why don’t you say slaughter, that’s what that is, slaughter!

  • @anthonycali-wrestling
    @anthonycali-wrestling Год назад

    Your comment about chicken feed is way off. Just because a feed is organic doesn't make it nutritious and just because a feed is "non-organic" doesn't make it McDonalds.