Wednesday, 15 April 2026

Sheep on the move

I am familiar with two poems entitled 'The Shepherd's Calander'. The more allegorical one by Edmund Spenser (1579) and that of John Clare's (1824) rural realism. The annual sequencing of sheep-keeping tasks remains much the same. 

This year's lambs are about four week's old now so it was time to move our small flock of nine ewes and ten lambs a short distance to some grazing a nearby farmer friend lends to us each year in return for one of our Norfolk Black turkey's at Christmas time. The sheep will be there for about 6-8 weeks before returning home again and some fresh grass. It is hoped that last year's drought in this part of the country won't be repeated.


The sheep are in their family groups but the ewe in the centre 
did not get pregnant, so no lambs for her this year.

In fact, nearly all of our smallholding activities come around in a regular annual cycle. Now I am busy sowing, pricking out, potting on and planting. We have quail and turkey eggs in incubators. (One of the latter will be the farmer's Christmas offering by which time it should be about 4-5 kilograms oven-ready weight). The last of the latest litter of piglets have recently departed to a new home. Twenty day old meat-variety chicks arrived for growing on, and egg production from hens and ducks is now at full throttle.

The regular cyclical routine which we live by suits us very well. It keeps us grounded whatever else is happening in the world.

7 comments:

  1. I like the idea of bartering a lovely Christmas turkey for some grazing time for your sheep and lambs. Our next door neighbours raise chicks, and when I saw them, knowing little about chicks, I thought they were rearing them to add to their egg producing hens, but I learned the practical truth, they were destined for the freezer!

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    1. Yes, it’s a good arrangement.

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  2. We are so far away from the rural round here; seasons are more likely to be marked by Easter eggs and summer holiday travel advertising than hearing the first cuckoo (not for years here) or watching for the swallow! Thank you for your posts, they play their part in keeping us grounded.

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    1. Thank you Kirsten. Still waiting for this year’s cuckoo here, but it will come.

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  3. That beautiful rainbow promise to Noah - " while the earth remains, summer and winter, seedtime and harvest, shall not cease" Whatever is going on 'out there', crazy men waging war etc, the seasons go on rolling round.
    These things do keep us grounded in dark days, as do words of peace from wise people. God bless the Pope, for his courageous condemnation of those with blood on their hands.

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  4. We have sheep near us altho we live in a seaside town, here in Wales there are always sheep where ever you are!

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