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The Rural Voice, 1998-06, Page 22WELLESLEY SHEEP FEEDERS AND SHERK'S HORSE FEEDER SHEEP FEEDERS 6' x 6' ' NrIMI� it h' , hi i� .KIK . Keeps chaff out of sheep's hair • made of 1" x 1" tubing 1/2" rounds • 2 7/8" apart • can be shoved closer as bale gets smaller !moi f� f 6.K. • Ruggedly built yet convenient feeder • Manufactured with 1" x 1" tubing and 14 gauge sheet metal • 32" wide trough with 3/8" rod V-type manger Rods are 2 1/2" apart for less hay waste • Grains and other fine particle feeds can be fed. Sizes available: 4', 6' and 8' long. Other sizes available upon request. SHERK'S HORSE FEEDER ifs • Trough made of 14 gauge sheet metal • 6" deep trough 32" from ground • V•type manger made of 3/8 rods, 3" apart Sizes available: 4' or 6' or 8' all 6' high Can be used for grains Canadian and other feeds 146 ' Made TILMAN SHERK R.R. 3, Wellesley, Ontario 519-656-3338 519-656-3429 evenings 18 THE RURAL VOICE The Ilallams built a new barn last year but it's a simple structure compared to barns going up for pig or dairy operations. barn twice a day milking cows. In the winter time the workload is about equal to a dairy farm, he feels. They could also get along with Tess land than they would for a dairy farm, Tracy points out. They own 100 acres, rent Steve's father's 60 acres and buy about 35 acres of hay a year. The sheep boom has been fueled by prices. "When I started you might get S65 for a Iamb in the summer and we're almost at the point we're disappointed if we don't get 5100 now. And at Christmas and Easter we were geeing S130 or 5 140 per 60 -pound lamb." He does his own shearing, learning by watching the shearer and starting by working with him. "1 found out it wasn't quite as easy as it looked," he chuckles. It's a skill you have to practice at, he says. Today he can shear 30-40 sheep and trim their feet in one day. Professional shearers can do 100 to 150 sheep a day. "I look pretty slow compared to them but I get it done. It probably saves us S1,000 a year in shearing costs." That's part of a philosophy of cutting costs by, wherever possible, doing work themselves, Steve says. Sheep farming is catching on. There are now four sheep farms in the neighbourhood including Steve's former boss who sold his cows and quota and got into sheep. Another neighbour got out of pigs to go into sheep. Part of the attractiveness of sheep is the low cost of housing. Just like pork and dairy farmers, Steve and Tracy put up a new bam last year. It cost considerably less, however, because they did most of the work themselves. Steve visited other new shccp barns before starting his, picking up ideas. Theirs is a simple 160 by 60 -foot pole structure with an insulated ceiling to cut down moisture condensation. There is no insulation in the walls. The floor is clay. "As long as you keep drafts off a sheep it's okay," Steve says. "When they're not lambing they don't even have to be inside. They run in and out. They also make use of two smaller barns at Steve's father's farm. The new barn allows them to drive right into the barn with large round bales so they've abandoned using small square bales. "I don't miss it at all," laughs Tracy. The alley is along one side of the barn and mangers separate the pens, which are along the other. They can set a large bale at one end of the manger and unroll it the length of the pens. Their chore time on the home farm has been reduced to a half-hour morning and night (Steve's father looks after another 75 ewes at his farm). Starting from scratch in the sheep business, Steve took advantage of two OATI courses (beginners and advanced) on sheep production offered in Walkerton. They went on farm tours and got a lot of advice from their friendly shearer. "I really like it now. We can kind of set our own hours." Steve says it suits him better being his own boss than working for someone else. "We're a lot less tied down than my parents are," says Tracy of her dairy -producer family. She keeps one cow and calf to remind her of her days growing up on a dairy farm. For non -sheep producers the myth of lambing season as a marathon of