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Annual Ewe Management Program (April Lambing). I. Ewe Production Stages Flushing:November 1 to November 15 Breeding:November 15 to December 7 Early Gestation:December.

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Presentation on theme: "Annual Ewe Management Program (April Lambing). I. Ewe Production Stages Flushing:November 1 to November 15 Breeding:November 15 to December 7 Early Gestation:December."— Presentation transcript:

1 Annual Ewe Management Program (April Lambing)

2 I. Ewe Production Stages Flushing:November 1 to November 15 Breeding:November 15 to December 7 Early Gestation:December 1 to March 20 Late Gestation:March 20 to April 13 Average Lambing Date:April 13 Lactation:April 13 to June 20 Average Weaning Date:June 20 Post-Weaning:June 20 to July 1 Maintenance:July 1 to November 1

3 II. Nutritional Flushing (14 days) A. Enter in 1.5 to 2.0 BCS B. Mineral, water, shade C. Two weeks before and entire 3-week breeding season D.Benefits 1. Synchronized breeding/ conception/lambing 2. 15 to 20% higher lambing rate E. No benefit if BCS > 3.0

4 II. Nutritional Flushing (14 days) A. Minimally Intensive 1.Graze same pasture 2.No concentrate supplement 3.Turn rams in on November 15

5 II. Nutritional Flushing (14 days) A. Moderately Intensive 1.De-worm ewes/rams on November 1 2.New pasture or 3.0 lb hay/ewe/d on pasture 3.No concentrate supplement 4.Turn rams in on November 15

6 II. Nutritional Flushing (14 days) A. Highly Intensive 1.De-worm ewes/rams on November 1 2.Trim hooves/foot bath (Zinc Sulfate) 3.New pasture and/or 3.0 lb hay/ewe/d on pasture 4.0.5 lb shelled corn/ewe/d 5.Turn rams in on November 15 6.ADG = 0.2 to 0.25 lb/ewe/d 7.Leave in 2.0 to 2.5 BCS

7 III. Breeding (21 days) A.Continue minimal, moderate, high intensity management for 21 days B.Same pasture for 7 days after ram removal C.Leave breeding in 2.0 to 2.5 BCS D.3 to 5 lb hay/ewe/d if pasture is short E.Mineral, water F.Ewes: ram Mature 35 to 50:1 Yrlg20 to 35:1 Lamb 15 to 20:1

8 IV. Early Gestation (110 days) A.Enter in 2.0 to 2.5 BCS B.ADG = 0.07 lb/ewe (total gain = 7 to 10 lb) C.Mineral, water D.Leave in 2.0 to 2.5 BCS E.Feed quality vs. quantity

9 IV. Early Gestation (110 days) A.Minimally Intensive 1.Roll baled grass hay (medium quality) or 3 to 5 lb/ewe/d on pasture

10 IV. Early Gestation (110 days) A.Cull open ewes B.FAMACHA/BCS beginning of EG C.De-worm 4’s and 5’s D.De-worm 3’s with BCS < 2.5 E.Roll baled grass hay (medium quality) or 5 lb/ewe/d on pasture

11 IV. Early Gestation (110 days) A.Check raddle marks for 17d after breeding season/cull opens B.Vaccinate for vibrio between March 1 and 15 C.FAMACHA/BCS beginning of EG D.De-worm 4’s and 5’s E.De-worm 3’s with BCS < 2.5 F.Roll baled grass hay (medium quality) or 5 lb/ewe/d on pasture G.0.5 to 1.0 lb corn/ewe/d for ewes < 2.5 BCS

12 V. Late Gestation (28 days) A.Enter in 3.0 BCS. B.Mineral, water C.ADG = 0.5 lb/ewe/d D.Leave in 3.5 to 4.0 BCS

13 V. Late Gestation (28 days) A.Minimally Intensive 1.Continue to feed grass hay ad libitum or 5.0 lb/ewe/d until spring grass comes 2.Hay quality higher than EG

14 V. Late Gestation (28 days) A.Moderately Intensive 1.Shear 2.FAMACHA/BCS first day of LG 3.De-worm 3’s, 4’s, and 5’s 4.Vibrio vaccination between March 1 and 15 5.Medium quality grass hay ad libitum or 5.0 lb/ewe/d until ewes quit eating in spring

15 V. Late Gestation (28 days) A.Highly Intensive 1.Shear 2.FAMACHA/BCS first day of LG 3.De-worm 3’s, 4’s, and 5’s 4.Vibrio vaccination between March 1 and 15 5.CDT vaccination 6.Begin to feed 3.3 lb grass hay (vegetative) + pasture pickings + 1.2 lb corn or spring pasture + 1.0 lb corn/ewe/d 7.Move ewes to barn or lot close to barn

16 VI. Lambing A.Enter in 3.5 to 4.0 BCS B.Mineral, water C.Leave in 3.5 to 4.0 BCS

17 VI. Lambing A.Minimally Intensive 1.Feed hay as long as they will eat it 2.Lamb in lot or small pasture near barn 3.Dock, castrate, identify lambs

18 VI. Lambing A.Moderately Intensive 1.Feed hay as long as they will eat it 2.Lamb in lot or small pasture near barn 3.Dock, castrate, identify lambs 4.Set up grafting area and graft 5.Artificially rear

19 VI. Lambing A.Highly Intensive 1.Move ewes to barn 7 days before 1 st lamb (a)Heaviest ewes in “up close” pen (b)Continue to move ewes into “up close” pen as ewes lamb 2.3.5 lb grass, 3.5 lb grass legume or 3.0 lb alfalfa hay + 1.5 lb shelled corn/ewe/d

20 VI. Lambing A.Highly Intensive 1.As ewes lamb, move to jugs 2.Iodine navel 3.Make sure lambs nurse and ewe claims 4.Only water first 24 hours 5.3.0 lb grass hay/ewe/d for 2 to 5 days 6.Dock, castrate, ear tag lambs on their way to nursery pen 7.De-worm all ewes out of jugs 8.In nursery pen, 5.0 lb alfalfa hay + 1.0 lb corn/ewe/d

21 VII. Lactation (60 to 70 days) A.Enter in 3.5 to 4.0 BCS B.Mineral, water, shade C.Leave lactation in 1.5 to 2.0 BCS D.Feed for milk, not BCS

22 VII. Lactation (60 to 70 days) A.Minimally Intensive 1. Graze spring, grass pasture

23 VII. Lactation (60 to 70 days) A.Moderately Intensive 1. Graze spring pasture + 1.0 lb corn/ewe/d 2. Rotate pastures – At least 30d recovery time 3. De-worm ewes with FAMACHA’s 3, 4, and 5 4. Cease corn feeding 1 week before weaning

24 VII. Lactation (60 to 70 days) A.Highly Intensive 1. Graze spring pasture + 1.0 lb corn/ewe/d 2. Rotate pastures – At least 30d recovery time 3. FAMACHA ewes at 30, 45, and 60 days 4. De-worm 3’s, 4’s, and 5’s 5. Cease corn feeding 1 week before weaning

25 VIII. Post-weaning (10 days) A.Cease corn feeding 1 week before weaning moderately and highly intensive ewes B.No feed or water for 48 hours C.If weather is hot, provide water and shade D.Water, allow to graze 2 hr for 3 days E.Gradually allow to graze full time

26 IX. Maintenance (123 days) A.Enter in 1.5 to 2.0 BCS B.De-worm FAMACHA’s 3, 4, and 5 C.Graze lowest quality pasture until next flushing D.Palpate udders 4 weeks after weaning E.FAMACHA and de-worm 3’s, 4’s, and 5’s again F.Cull ewes G.Mineral, water, shade H.Vaccinate for vibrio and EAE 30 days before breeding I.Leave in 1.5 to2.0 BCS

27 Annual Ram Management Program (April Lambing)

28 I. Nutritional Flushing (14 days) A. Enter in 2.5 to 3.0 BCS B. Mineral, water C. Leave in 2.5 to 3.0 BCS

29 I. Nutritional Flushing (14 days) A. Minimally Intensive 1.No concentrate 2.Remain on average pasture

30 I. Nutritional Flushing (14 days) A. Moderately Intensive 1.De-worm fertile rams on November 7 2.No concentrate 3.Remain on average pasture

31 I. Nutritional Flushing (14 days) A. Highly Intensive 1.De-worm fertile rams on November 7 2.1.5 to 2.0 lb corn/ram/d November 1 to 15

32 II. Breeding (21 days) A.Turn fertile rams in on November 15 B.Manage like ewes, except supplement highly intensive rams with 1.5 to 2.0 lb corn/ram/d C.Ewes to ram ratio: Mature 35 to 50:1 Yrlg 20 to 35:1 Lamb 15 to 20:1 D.Remove rams on December 7 in BCS of 2.0 to 2.5

33 III. Maintenance (330 days) A.Re-acquaint rams B.Assign to winter pasture 1.Separate ram lambs from yrlgs and mature rams 2.Grass hay ad libitum to yrlgs and mature rams 3.Grass hay ad libitum + 1.5 to 2.0 lb corn/ram/d to ram lambs C.Shear wool types in March/April D.Trim hooves and de-worm in March/April

34 III. Maintenance (330 days) A.Pen all rams in barn on May 1 B.4 to 5 lb grass hay + 1.0 to 2.0 lb corn/ram/d C.Keep mature rams, yearlings, and lambs separately in barn or on pasture until November 15 D.Turn to fall pasture on October 1 E.BSE on Highly Intensive rams F.De-worm all rams in Moderately and Highly Intensive management on November 7 G.Mineral, water, shade

35 Annual Lamb Management Program (April Lambing)

36 I. Moderately Intensive A. Born in lot or small pasture near barn B. Iodine navel C. Dock, castrate, ear tag D. May vaccinate for sore mouth E. Return to pasture with ewes F. De-worm as needed

37 I. Moderately Intensive A.Wean at 90 days to pasture or sell as feeders B.To grass pasture 1.Adjust to 90% corn 10% SBM diet 2.2 Feed 1x/day @ 2% of average body weight 3.3 De-worm as necessary 4.Rotate pastures 5.Mineral, water, shade 6.Market at 100 to 130 lb in Nov/Dec

38 I. Highly Intensive A.Born in “up close” pens in barn B.To jugs 1.Weigh, record, iodine navel 2.In jugs 24 hours up to 2 to 5 days 3.Dock, castrate, ear tag 4.May vaccinate for sore mouth

39 I. Highly Intensive A.Move to pastures so ewes and lambs have access to barn 1.Creep available by 7 days of age 2.Creep = 90% corn, 10% SBM, Aureo-50 3.Vaccinate for Enterotoxemia 4.Wean at 60 to 70 days of age (a)Leave lambs in same environment (b)De-worm

40 I. Highly Intensive A.Move to alfalfa pasture 1.Supplement 1x/d with corn at 2% of average body weight 2.Rotate pastures 3.Clip after grazing to hay cutting height 4.De-worm as necessary 5.Can self-feed as lambs get close to market 6.Mineral, water, shade B. Market at 100 to 120 lb in Oct/Nov


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