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قراءة كتاب Total Per Cent Lambing Rules
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Total Per Cent
Lambing Rules
COPYRIGHT 1915
BY
THOMAS BOYLAN
Table of Contents
- Total Per Cent Lambing Rules
- Beginning
- The Drop Band
- Working the Bed Ground
- Gathering the Drop
- Mixing to Make Up Herds
- Docking Or Trimming Lambs
- Pulling Lambs—Eversion of Womb
- Twins: Their Care—Dead Lambs
- Deformed and Alkalied Lambs
- Large and Spoiled Udders
- Trailing Ewes and Lambs—"Runbacks."
- Accidental Mixing
- Mixing, Shelter, Coyotes, Badger Holes
- Foretelling Weather—Almanacs, Barometers
- Herding, Dogs and Feed
- Shed Lambing
- The "Pullman"
- Night Work
- Tags
- Salt
- Chilled Lambs
- The Early Lamb
- Signs of the Zodiac
- Transcriber's Changes and Known Problems
Total Per Cent Lambing Rules
Copyright 1915 by Thomas Boylan
To Those Lambing Ewes:
It is quite impossible to give rules that will cover each day all your environs, as shelter, feed and water, help, etc. However, under ordinary circumstances, the following will prove successful:
These pages being written for the one who would try, it is the object and desire of the writer to explain to the inexperienced hand, in a plain manner, the work of lambing sheep, especially under range conditions. Having made a study of the work for years, we have seen the utter impossibility of verbally explaining the many necessary details to the "new men" each year. We admit lambing ewes in large numbers successfully is somewhat of a fine art, still common sense, patience and endurance will allow any one adapted to the care of live stock—which means a person who appreciates the worth and meaning of life in any form—to lamb sheep. Common sense will permit any one to readily have at least some idea of the physical endurance, both as to temperature and nutrition, of the animal in his care. The patience which enables you to endure the inclemency of any surrounding for their welfare, is also necessary, for it, too, prevents that hostile, or we might say hideous mood of mind which causes so many people to abuse live stock when it is absolutely uncalled for.
It should be self-evident to the ordinary person that life in its beginning is easily overcome by death; that nature has endowed man with a higher intellect that he may care for that life which in his esteem has sufficient worth to justify that care. A providing nature has endowed the sheep with many desires and inclinations, which, while quite clear to the naturalist, to the casual observer and shepherd often appear very contrary. That the sheep is the most contrary animal, other than the hog, is an assertion which often comes from a lack of knowledge of its nature.
True, when unintelligently selected surroundings compel you to howl, whistle, and dog it out of its natural contentment, it often becomes contrary, but this mood is forced upon it by its environs, of which the barking dog and the unintelligent and noisy shepherd are generally the greatest fault.
Allow sheep their natural contentment by leaving them to their own care whenever possible. They will then hold themselves to the herd and very seldom stray off. Tending sheep in this manner will permit them to show you their wants and necessities. Provide them when you can, for it pays the owner and always lightens your work.
Although sheep will soon become used to the whistling and