I hope you enjoy some of these photos and please do ask questions if you have any.
Here is Fancy of the 3 Dorset girls that began our flock. They are friendly, easy going and have lovely fleece, that is soft, crimpy and dyes like a dream.
Soon after the Dorsets, we found a wonderful breeder of Nigerian Dwarf Dairy Goats, Barb Halligan of Cornerstone farm. From Ellie, Grace and Zoe was the beginnings of our herd. Llew the black llama gelding is the herd guardian and he is ruled by Lashes who also likes to sunbathe.
A small flock of Jacobs, a rare 4 horned breed, from Stratton Hall in NJ joined us last year. There is a lot of individuality to their fleeces. Kira and Jester have the softest but still with a little lustre. Bethany's is maybe what one thinks or reads about for Jacobs. This group of 2 ewes and a wether also included Issac the ram, so then we had ....
Lambs! Having 5 Mums give birth really explodes the flock, now the flock numbers 19 in total. What we were surprised about was how colorful the DorsetxJacobs are, so I'll have lots of brown wools to both sell, as well as spin and weave with. Do stop over at our web site www. littlemeadowsfarm.net to see most of our sheep and our Adopt a Sheep Program.
Mr. Bunny came to live with us last Feb., his original name was Thundercloud because he was all grey. After his first shearing tho he is now a white coated guy. Still a sweetie and is doing very well living side by side with Ranger a French Angora bunny gifted to us by Meg. Their fiber is carded into the sheep wool to spin up warm & soft yarns. They do not live in cages but in special enclosures on grass.
This summer we added 3 lovely Corriedale girls to the flock, Betty & Mabel are Precious' twins and the three of them have blended in well. Precious' fleece is micron tested at 24 so is extremely soft - we expect Betty & Mabel to have very similar fleeces too.
2 comments:
I would love to learn more about Mr. Bunny: what is his enclosure like? does he need special care so that his coat is still usable as fiber?
I've been curious about angoras/fiber but don't like the whole 2 x 4 wire hutch idea. Thanks!
Hey Megan, Mr. Bunny is soon to move into new digs as outlined in my latest post - it's going to be fenced in with 2x4" welded wire in a rectangle 15x25'. If he's on grass his coat stays fine - I only have a little stuff in his fleece if he gets into straw or hay too much. For the most part where he collects anything is in areas that I skirt off anyway. Definitely I think this is the way to keep bunnies because he can run, hop, sit up in his "Up Periscope" mode, interact with the sheep, goats and chickens. But let me warn you Angora bunnies are work because they must be either sheared or combed out on their schedule - no putting it off or they matt and can become sick from wool impaction caused from self grooming. Mr. Bunny is sheared - he is a German but Ranger is a French, so he's combed out. Combing out needs to be down over a week or 2 but is less stressful than shearing since you needn't worry about cutting their skin. These boys are very affectionate and if you want an Angora, you might see if you can actually keep him inside as outlined by many of the Rabbit Rescue sites. My house is very small so I don't have that option yet.
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