This
management document describes the activities and schedule for the
Cornell Sheep Farm. Some of the activities are required
by the institution to comply with federal regulations for animal
care and they may not necessarily be appropriate for commercial
farms.
Current
management calendar. The numbers at the top of each
day indicate the star period and the day within the star period.
The Cornell Sheep Farm is managed on the STAR
reproductive management system, first documented by Brian
Magee in August 1983. It is based upon the 146-day gestation
length of sheep and the fact that one-fifth of a year is half
of a sheep gestation. There are five lambing and
lactating periods and five corresponding breeding and gestating
periods each year (see figure below). The STAR is easier
to manage compared to other accelerated lambing systems because
the breeding of one portion of the flock corresonds exactly with the lambing of the other portion. The breeding
and gestating group is kept on pasture while the lambing and
lactating group is in or near the barn. The STAR system
has many management advantages for commercial sheep production.
Although
specific dates are given on the calendars, very few activities
must take place on the exact date given in the calendar. Holidays,
weekends, marketing opportunities, and available labor often will
dictate that the activities be carried out a few days earlier or
later than shown in the schedule. Also, the STAR in Figures
1 and 2 can be rotated so that the dates for the STAR periods can
fit the schedule of a particular farm. The three fall breeding
seasons can be shortened to 20 days from 30 days to reduce lambing
times in the winter, spring and summer lambing seasons.
Major activities. The major events are breeding,
lambing, and weaning. Beginning breeding dates for the Cornell
flock are about 1 January , 15 March, 27 May,
8 August, and 20 October. Breeding lasts for 20 to 30 days.
Lambing times can start about 143 days after breeding and last for
up to 35 days. Because our ewes are still producing significant
milk when the lambs are weaned, feed and water is restricted beginning
two days prior to weaning to
dramatically reduce milk production.
Lambs are weighed at weaning and segregated by sex by
about six weeks after weaning. Replacement lambs are vaccinated
against clostridial organisms, mainly to prevent overeating disease
and tetanus, on or just after the lambs are segregated by sex and
again about one month later.
Lambs have access to the same high energy diet in a creep from
a few days after birth until they are marketed (see figure below). Replacement
animals are switched to pasture or a forage based diet as they approach mature weights. Replacement
ewe lambs are bred to lamb first
at about a year of age after which they enter the breeding flock.
Other
activities are scheduled around the major events or occur at specific
seasons of the year. Because our farm is a public place,
we need to keep it presentable as much as possible.
Alleyway sweeping. Unfortunately,
there is only one alleyway for sheep traffic and feeding in our
barns. This
means that there are many days each period when working sheep
through the chutes doesn't allow time to sweep the alleyways for
a week or more. An attempt is made to sweep the alleyways
at least twice weekly and before major teaching or extension events.
Chute cleanup. Manure in our working chutes is compressed
into a solid mat during periods of intense sorting and other management
activity. Because the chute floors must be soaked with water
for several days to loosen the manure, time and temperature prevent
cleaning them thoroughly after each period of intense use. Weather
permitting, they are cleaned near the end of period 1 before the
spring shearing, near the beginning of period 3 prior to the
start of lambing, and near the beginning of period 4.
Shearing. Lambing management is easier if ewes are
shorn just prior to lambing. Because they will be kept in
the barn during severe weather, lambing ewes are shorn prior to
winter lambing (period 1). Spring (period 2) and summer (period
3) lambing ewes are also shorn prior to lambing.
Foot trimming. Feet of ewes are trimmed, if needed, during the
40-day lactation period after the end of lambing season. The
feet of all breeding rams are checked and trimmed, if needed, a
few days before the start of breeding season whether or not the
rams will be used for breeding during that period.
Ewe sorting. Gestating ewes are sorted for
condition and by udder palpation in a portable corral on pasture
or brought to the barn to be sorted one to two weeks before lambing. Ewes
with udder development are vaccinated for clostridial organisms
and placed in lambing pens. During winter, thin ewes are
kept in the barn and fed a higher energy diet than they can obtain
from winter grazing.
Weaned ewes are sorted for condition, bad teeth, bad udders,
and for other culling reasons noted during lambing and lactation. During
winter, thin, healthy ewes and young, replacement ewe lambs are
kept in the barn and fed a higher energy diet than they can obtain
from winter grazing.
Lambing management. Wet navels of newborn lambs are dipped
in iodine. Healthy single lambs are immediately eartagged
and placed into a mixing pen with their mothers and other single
or twin lambs. Small or weak single lambs may be placed in
lambing jugs (small pens) with their mothers to ensure that they get a good start and for fostering
orphan lambs to their mothers. Twin and higher litters are
placed in lambing jugs to minimize mismothering and to ensure bonding.
Healthy jugged lambs are eartagged and turned into mixing pens
within 24 hours.
Litters containing weak lambs or poor mothers are kept in jugs
until the mothers have accepted all the lambs and the lambs are
strong enough to do well in a mixing pen. Litters with more
than twin lambs are placed in a separate mixing pen where the ewes
are placed on a full feed of a high energy diet as well
as good quality hay.
Orphan lambs are eartagged immediately. Those that can not
be fostered onto a ewe are bottle fed colostrum (cow's colostrum
can be used if ewe colostrum is not available) three times to appetite
and then reared artificially on cold milk replacer for a minimum
of 28 days. Finely ground high energy feed is available at
all times.
Tails are docked using an emasculator and lambs are
scratched with an autogenous sore mouth vaccine within three weeks of birth.
Worming. The ewe flock is wormed three times in the
spring. The first worming is just before the ewes are turned
onto pasture near the end of period 2 in mid May. The second
worming is about three weeks later. The third worming is
about three weeks after the second worming but may be timed to
occur at the end of breeding season when the rams are removed.
Manure management. Barn cleaning is done primarily
by the T&R Center Field Crew when field work is caught up or
bad weather prevents field work. The barn is completely cleaned
before spring plowing and planting. There is a second cleaning
after first cutting hay crop harvest. The third major cleaning
is after corn harvest in the fall. Gutter cleaning under
the experimental and artificial rearing pens is done after each
experiment if the weather is warm enough to allow running the gutter
cleaner. During the summer, the gutter is cleaned every three
weeks to prevent larva development from insects.
Daily schedule. From time to
time students and temporary employees may provide a significant
proportion of the labor force at the Sheep Farm. Along with
guidance by the farm manager, this daily schedule will help them
to prioritize their work. This is not an exhaustive list.
- Look over all of the sheep in the barn to see if any are sick
and need treatment. During lambing season, check for
ewes with newborn lambs and ewes that may be having trouble
lambing. These observations are continued throughout the day
while working on other tasks. If animals are found that
need help or treatment, follow previous instructions for the
problem or bring to the attention of the manager or veterinarian.
- Check health records from the previous day for animals that need
to be treated again.
- Check that all lambs in jugs are suckling and strong and that
ewes have water and feed.
- Check that all waterers are working. Clean waterers
as time permits but at least once weekly.
- Check feeders of all sheep being self-fed a total mixed diet. Clean the feeders, if necessary, and add
feed to any that need it. Note that sheep being self-fed
a total mixed diet should never be without feed. This
prevents metabolic problems and overcrowding at the feeders.
- Fill mangers with enough hay to provide a 24-hour supply for each pen and refill any mineral feeders that are low.
- Clean any hay feeders, like those being used in the triplet
mixing pen, once weekly or whenever they need to be cleaned.
- Add bedding to pens as needed.
- Change the bedding of lambs in boxes in the lab.
- Walk slowly through each pen of sheep in the barn to check for sick animals.
- During lambing season, check pregnant ewes six to eight times
a day.
- Eartag and record lambs in jugs within 24 hours.
- Check the pasture ewes and use a voltage meter to check electric
fence.
- Refill mineral feeders that need it.
- In
hot, summer weather, be sure the pasture sheep have a source
of fresh water. Note that, unless the weather is
hot, forage will provide non lactating grazing sheep with adequate
water and supplemental water will be ignored. The need for
water can be tested by placing a small bucket of water near
the salt feeder.
- Sweep alleyways.
- Sweep the entryway hallways.
- Sweep and clean the feed room.
- Clean
the laboratory.
- Clean the break room.
- Clean the boot-washing area.
- Clean the bathrooms.
- Organize the tool center.
- Bale any unbaled wool and clean and organize the wool area.
- Clean the arena area.
- Organize the storage area at the end of the B-barn.
- Repair broken boards in wooden gates and pen dividers or discard and build new ones.
- Remove old permanent fencing that has fallen down around pastures.
- Enter records into the Cewe data base if trained to do so.
Treatment of sick animals. Flock health is under
the supervision of Dr. Mary Smith. Follow the guidance of
Brian Magee, the sheep farm manager, and the standard operating
procedures for health care in the notebook in the break room. Record health observations and
treatments and the deaths of any animals. Dead animals are
placed in the cooler for later examination by Dr. Smith.
Animal ID. All animals
must have at least two eartags at all times. Click
here for detailed information about eartags. Add a set
of duplicate eartags to animals with only one eartag. If
a sheep is found with no eartags, give it a new set of crossbred
(CXB) tags. Record all additions of tags on the appropriate
clipboard for later entry into the computer. Our record of
animals leaving the flock is based upon records of sale animals
and dead animals. Be careful to read and record the correct
eartag numbers any time eartags are recorded. Before animals
leave the barn as sale animals, use the Cewe data base management system to check that each animal is eligible for sale based upon age and drug withdrawal times. |