Things certainly turned in May, from the dry in the proceeding months (157 mls Jan - March) to 145 mmls in April and 280 mls in May (110 mls more than we had in any other May in the last 5 years). Another 40mls to add to the June rain chart things are starting to get soggey underfoot.
29th May we scanned all the ewes in one day rather than two separate days as we had done in the past. The general wider talk is that scanning percentages will be back based on the drought experienced. We were grateful that our scanning faired well, with the Terminals and MA ewes scanning the same as last year and our 2-tooths were up 18%.
Taratahi Students and others helping out at scanning |
The ewes got a dose of Cypercare as they went up the race. |
The ewes were in good condition going into tupping at around 64kg and 3.5 BCS, only a tad back on previous years. During tupping they largely held condition through the two and half cycles to 12th April when the rams came out. The drought broke mid-April and with the rapid growth of the pastures, stock have struggled since then, so at scanning some of the ewes were back on condition. We have taken the skinny 2-tooths, with a focus on the twinners and treating them a bit better. We have added grain to their diet to boost them along. Not always an easy thing to get sheep initially interested to grain and as a result we have lost 2 sheep, out of 200. And to keep numbers up in our terminals we have taken some MA singles down to the terminal mob.
Twin bearing 2-tooth ewes eating barley out of the feeder and hay off the ground following scanning. |
Whilst grass has grown, feed on the farm is still tight. Currently in the process of getting rid of the last of our lambs, before sorting out all of the cattle before hunkering down for the winter, which so far has been wet and mild.
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