South East Farmer Janaury 2022

Page 44

ALAN WEST SHEEP TOPICS ALAN WEST Sheep farmer

WELCOME TO THE NEW YEAR

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We enter the new year on a relatively positive note, with all of the indicators pointing towards a continuation of the robust trade in sheep meat experienced in 2021 and with fingers crossed that they are correct. In spite of a significant decrease in the volume of exports last year, there was strong domestic demand, due in no small part to many of our customers rediscovering proper home cooking during lockdown, sourcing quality ingredients and cooking meals from scratch. If you are looking for quality ingredients, what could be better than a nice bit of grass-fed, locally produced lamb? This, combined with the reopening of restaurants, certainly helped sustain domestic demand during last year and hopefully into 2022. A strong domestic demand and tight supplies throughout 2021 gave rise to a much-welcomed and needed hike in prices, which finished the year some 20% above their position 12 months previously. The post-Covid-19 impact on labour availability at abattoirs may also have contributed to restrictions in supplies at a retail level. Buoyed by high prices for breeding sheep last autumn, some ewe lambs may have been drawn into the market, but I suspect that some producers have kept their options open and held back ewe lambs originally destined for slaughter in the hope that breeding stock prices will be as strong this autumn. Solid hogget prices this spring may still tempt some of these into the market. Even the global impact of Covid-19 has helped UK sheep producers; supplies of Australian and New Zealand lamb are down by some 4%, and enduring, Covid-19 related, problems within the shipping industry have given rise to a further contraction of supplies from the Antipodes. Sadly, it’s not all positives, but that’s life; things do not look quite as bright on the other side of the equation as input prices rise. With ammonium nitrate rapidly approaching £500/tonne and urea significantly the wrong side of £550/ tonne as we approached the end of 2021, I suspect that many sheep keepers will be reappraising their fertiliser use. Rather fortuitously we all have ready access to both the raw material and the facilities to substitute some of the fertiliser that we might otherwise purchase, something that may also tick some environmental and Sustainable Farming Incentive (SFI) scheme boxes. Of the air that surrounds us, 70% provides the raw material, completely free of charge. The facilities, in the form of a bit of legume seed, cost a little more but are still not expensive, I say legume quite deliberately. Clover is not the only nitrogen fixer; other legumes are available. There is an increasing abundance of alternatives that all do very much the same job; take a look at any good seed catalogue to see what is available for almost any situation. Legumes have, as additional bonuses, the capacity to improve soil health (ticking more boxes) and provide a supply of good quality, relatively high protein feed, reducing the demand for purchased feed (still more boxes). Many people have lost their lives to Covid-19, a number of sheep keepers amongst them. This is something I know we all lament, but without wishing to diminish the personal tragedies, the impact on the wider sheep sector has not been as bad as it may have been. We have fared (relatively) lightly; having sheep in need of attention exempted producers from many of the movement restrictions imposed in the first and subsequent “lockdowns” and in general we were able to carry on as ‘normal’. But sheep farming can be a lonely and isolating business at the best of times, a factor that was brought into sharper focus with restrictions on the access to auction markets and other opportunities for face-to-face social interaction. This has no doubt been difficult for some, depriving many of those important opportunities just to catch up with other producers and see how their friends and colleagues are faring. Auction marts provide an often overlooked, useful social function, possibly not

JANUARY 2022 | WWW.SOUTHEASTFARMER.NET

so much in the South East as in some of the more isolated areas of the country; I am sure that the opportunities they provide for social interactions make a valuable contribution to the mental health of many producers; certainly not an issue that many are willing to discuss or admit to, but simply having the opportunity to share a problem often makes things just a little easier. Farmers in general, and livestock keepers in particular, tend to bear loneliness and isolation with considerable tolerance and stoicism, but there are times when we all, as sheep producers, would benefit from being a little less forbearing and long-suffering. I’m sure that there have been many shepherds that have conversed almost as much with their dogs over the past couple of years as they have with other people, immediate family excepted, of course. We are fortunate in having intelligent and thinking working dogs for company as we go about our daily routines. But for the whims of Edward I, it is quite possible that we would have livestock guard dogs to accompany us, and I suspect that they would not provide quite such good companionship. Had Edward in 1281 not commissioned Peter Corbett to hunt down and eradicate wolves from England, we may by now have been working in a completely different sheep industry and we almost certainly would have had different canine companions. Corbett and his bands of hunters cleared the country of the last major predator by the end of the 13th century, although some probably remained in the wilds of northern England a while longer and considerably longer north of the border. This action effectively removed the need to guard flocks against animal predators, leaving the shepherds of the time to focus their attention on breeding dogs for herding and droving. The ancient origins of the dogs of the time, based almost certainly on a combination of droving and guard dogs brought to Britain by the Romans, a Spitz type herding dog introduced some eight to nine hundred years later and a few local dog strains added to the mix, led to the development of a range of herding and droving dogs. These hard-working dogs would have served shepherds and drovers for hundreds of years. A Dr John Caius, in his 1570 treatise on dogs, describes herding dogs and a manner of working that would


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