Country-Wide Sheep 2021

Page 22

BUSINESS

Sheep milking

Milk’s Zealandia. These genetics are in the form of leased rams or frozen semen for artificial insemination. In the South Island there are Canterburybased groups with specialised sheep dairy genetics and producer structures are developing. An innovative mobile milking plant concept designed by pioneer sheep milking enthusiast Ian MacDonald is gaining traction. Associated is a truck and trailer unit with refrigerated milk tanks.

A niche sheep of the future BY: KEN GEENTY

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heep are unique among farmed ruminants, potentially having meat, wool and milk to their credit. All three products have varying profits with dairy milk topping the list by some margin. Sheep dairying, though, needs a milking setup, specialised genetics, plentiful pasture and secure milk supply outlets. The ‘sheep of the future’ concept outlined here covers limited niche opportunities in the growing sheep milking industry, with synergistic opportunities on the back of mainstream dual-purpose meat and wool production. Dairy sheep. Estimated numbers of dairy sheep in New Zealand are in the vicinity 25,000 with most suppliers linked to larger corporates like Spring Sheep and Maui Milk. Flock sizes vary from smaller boutique operations with 500-800 milking ewes to larger commercial units of 1000 or more ewes. A specialist sheep dairy farm will be restricted to easier-contour areas with good pasture growth and proximity to sheep milk collection points. There are similarities

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to cow dairying with good feeding of milking ewes a must. However, a plus for sheep is they are more environmentally friendly than cattle with lower soil nitrogen loadings and positive pasture fertilising impacts from efficiently spread faeces and urine. Sheep milking genetics. Local sheep dairy crossbreds based on northern hemisphere specialist breeds such as Lacaune, East Friesian and Awassi, crossed with local breeds like the Coopworth, yield about 250-350 litres per lactation. At ewe milk prices up to $3 per litre economics soar with gross annual incomes in the vicinity of $1000 per ewe. Surprisingly when this author began NZ sheep dairy research in the mid-1970s the French Lacaune was reported as having similar annual milk yield to that from our Poll Dorsets of about 150 litres per lactation. After several decades of sophisticated genetic selection in France the Lacaune now pumps out over 600 litres per lactation! Ready-made specialised sheep dairy genetics are available from the largest North Island sheep milking operatives including Spring Sheep’s Southern Cross and Maui

Sheep milking flocks. Development of a new sheep milking flock should be in conjunction with one of the above industry organisations and associated consultants. Options for inclusion of a local breed suited to your particular environment in the gene mix should be flexible. Remembering sheep already with good milking potential such as Coopworth or Poll Dorset should be favoured if upgrading with the specialist sheep milking genetics. Progeny growth rates and meat characteristics will also be a consideration. Emphasis is not only on milk volume as characteristics such as milking speed are important as is milk composition. Udder shape of the best producers will have a cleavage meaning a strong centre ligament and with teats pointing more to the ground than sideways. Udder size does not generally have a good correlation with dairy milk production. With inclusion of local breeds in milking ewes it’s unlikely expensive sheep barns will be needed. Pasture-fed sheep milk from our natural grazing systems is considered a promotional benefit for the wide range of sheep dairy products developed. Lamb rearing. Additional income from lambs could be considered a bonus but usually means more work. One option is to remove lambs from milking ewes soon after birth and artificially rear them either onfarm or by contracted-out lamb rearing. Another is to leave the lambs on ewes, either fully or on a sharemilking basis, and early weaning them at 12-15kg liveweight, at about five weeks old, followed by continued milking of ewes. However, leaving lambs on ewes initially can mean reduced dairy milk yield of 50-75 litres per ewe partially or fully suckling on average 1.5 lambs for the five weeks. Hence a large opportunity cost of more than $150 in dairy milk income results. An effective and low-cost way of artificially rearing lambs from dairy ewes is use of cold ewe milk replacer. Lambs are

Country-Wide

October 2021


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Articles inside

Calculator works out the numbers

2min
pages 172-173

And now, Freshwater Farm Plans

3min
page 171

Fewer but better sheep needed

8min
pages 166-170

Capturing the swing to natural fibres

3min
page 157

Profile: Wool’s colour and future is bright

5min
pages 152-156

Finding the winners

6min
pages 148-151

Obituary: Holmes Warren

5min
pages 146-147

Ram selection: Value in taking your time

2min
page 141

Breeding low-methane sheep

8min
pages 138-140

Condition major profit driver

11min
pages 129-133

What is wool’s future in NZ?

9min
pages 134-137

Reversing triple drench resistance

3min
pages 117-118

Plus equals assurance

2min
page 119

Shedding sheep: Reducing the workload

3min
page 116

Drenching: Achieving balance

2min
page 115

Pre-weaning treatments can be crucial

6min
pages 111-114

Mixing it with sheep and cattle

6min
pages 108-110

Resistant, resilient lambs make similar gains

6min
pages 90-91

What will the sheep of tomorrow be?

5min
pages 96-97

Post mortems: Get your knives out

8min
pages 102-104

Progeny testing: Resistant rams top performers

3min
page 63

Focus on timeless principles

6min
pages 42-45

To B12 or not B12 at tailing

4min
pages 105-107

Strong demand from China

2min
page 41

Succession: Clear vision, robust plan needed

6min
pages 26-27

High hopes for UK Christmas lamb

7min
pages 38-40

Testing time for new wool particle products

3min
pages 28-30

Super star status beckons for strong wool

4min
page 31

Sheep dairy full on

3min
page 25

Inverary Station scrutinises its business

9min
pages 18-21

India and Middle East: Good things take time

6min
pages 36-37

A niche sheep of the future

5min
pages 22-24
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