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Help! My farm has been attacked by small horse eating lambs!

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  • Help! My farm has been attacked by small horse eating lambs!

    Yes, it is true. A horse eating lamb has invaded my farm. I will be lucky if any yearlings survive.

    A few days ago I woke up, spent a couple of hours feeding and messing with the horses, and then went in to get ready for work. As I pulled down the driveway to leave I looked out into the yearling pasture and noticed a medium sized dog chasing the horses. I called my husband to come out and help then ran out to the pasture to save my yearlings.

    As I got closer I kept thinking, wow that dog runs funny. It is almost like it is bounding over the tall grass. Oh, and it doesn't look like a dog.

    That is because it is a horse eating lamb. My poor terrified yearlings were running like crazy to get away from the little lamb. The lamb just wanted them to stand still so that she could be part of their herd (errr...flock?). Every time the yearlings stopped running the lamb would bound toward them, scaring them all over again and prompting more running.

    So now I own a lamb. We have scoured the area and nobody is missing a lamb. She is virtually impossible to contain and has now taken up residence with my oldest and sweetest broodmare and her 8 week old foal. They thankfully aren't scared of her and she sticks right by them. When the filly lays down the little lamb lays right next to her, actually touching her. When the filly walks the lamb walks underneath her. It is the cutest thing I have ever seen.

    Here is the happy flock sharing their dinner this evening:
    http://s446.photobucket.com/albums/q...t=DSC01541.jpg
    http://s446.photobucket.com/albums/q...t=DSC01543.jpg

    Just had to share!

  • #2
    Oh my! Funny, cute and sad at the same time.
    COTH's official mini-donk enabler

    "I am all for reaching out, but in some situations it needs to be done with a rolled up news paper." Alagirl

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    • #3
      Soooooooo cute good luck with your new little one! A friend bought a lamb many years ago to keep her weaned foal company and they became the best of friends. She still has the lamb which is now a big girl who follows her around like a dog, does tricks has her own stall. She is a total sweetheart!

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      • #4
        aww pretty cute.

        I found a lamb over next to some of our yearlings last week. But knew where it came from ( neighbors own lambs). Just couldn't get it back to the fence and couldn't catch it.

        Are you now bottle feeding it ?

        P.
        A Wandering Albertan - NEW Africa travel blog!

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        • #5
          Loved your story and pictures
          \"Tomorrow is a new day with no mistakes in it.\" Anne of Green Gables

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          • #6
            How adorable! I think the lamb is smaller than your mare's head!
            .

            Comment


            • #7
              Neat pictures.
              Did you name the lamb yet?

              Ask your vet about what the lamb can eat and what may be poisonous to it in horse feeds.
              I think you need to watch the minerals, if I remember right.
              Copper toxicosis happens in sheep if they eat from some horse mineral blocks or feeds:

              http://ag.ansc.purdue.edu/sheep/articles/coppertox.html

              Sweet of the mare to let the lamb stay around.

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              • Original Poster

                #8
                Originally posted by Bluey View Post
                Neat pictures.
                Did you name the lamb yet?

                Ask your vet about what the lamb can eat and what may be poisonous to it in horse feeds.
                I think you need to watch the minerals, if I remember right.
                Copper toxicosis happens in sheep if they eat from some horse mineral blocks or feeds:

                http://ag.ansc.purdue.edu/sheep/articles/coppertox.html

                Sweet of the mare to let the lamb stay around.
                You are right about the copper, I checked on that before I let her have access to any horse feed. I am having to channel my FFA/4-H days to remember anything about raising sheep! I don't have mineral blocks out, just salt as I prefer top dressing minerals on their feed. I just fed the mare hers by hand so the lamb didn't get any.

                No name yet, still deciding whether or not to keep her. That mare is a gem though isn't she?


                Originally posted by Polydor View Post
                Are you now bottle feeding it ?
                She looks to be a "weanling" aged lamb, maybe 4 months old or so. She grazes, browses, munches hay, and I have some all stock feed in a creep feeder for her.

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                • #9
                  You might want to put a small bell on the lamb, so horses cand track her without being able to see her well. Our lambs take naps, and sometimes they are rather invisible. However the bell rings when they move at all, so the upward leap out of any tall grass is not a surprise to the horses. I got the Dollar Store snap collars, work just fine and are washable.

                  Horses are much calmer with the bells to warn them. Horses don't really like the lambs, so they are kept apart to prevent damaging the lambs. Nice that your broodmare lets her come close to foal.

                  Wonder if someone just dumped the lamb, she hasn't had her tail done. If you clip her hair/wool short, the electric fence will bite them harder, so you can contain them better. Sheep should have no access to horse mineral blocks, just white salt. Also no horse grain with added supplements, that copper is bad for sheep. Sheep like plain cracked corn and oats, learn to come for snacks. Mine go right to their pen at night when you open the field gate, grain is waiting inside, so I just follow and lock the pen.

                  Good luck with her.

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                  • #10
                    Really soooo cute
                    www.Somermistfarm.com
                    Quality Hunter Ponies

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                    • #11
                      Very cute! We have an old rescue horse at my barn with a sheep companion. He was rescued with the sheep, and they thought it would be cruel to separate them, so she stays with him 24/7. Both are turned out in the big grass horse pasture and the sheep doesn't bother anyone.

                      What I'm saying is, I think you should keep her.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        What a cute story!

                        Please tell me the foal's name is Mary?

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by In_ View Post
                          Please tell me the foal's name is Mary?


                          Love it!

                          What CUTE photos!!!! Of course you are going to keep the lamb. Any other talk is pure nonsense.
                          Founding Member of "I Kept 'Off Topic Day!' Open"

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                          • #14
                            So precious! Poor little lamb just wanted a family...and now has one!

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              I think you must keep the lamb. There's no giving up something that cute

                              Comment


                              • #16
                                How precious!

                                Just remember, mares eat oats and does eat oats and little lambs eat ivy!
                                Crayola posse~ orange yellow, official pilot
                                Proud owner of "High Flight" & "Shorty"

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                                • #17
                                  a kid will eat ivy too
                                  Nothing says "I love you" like a tractor. (Clydejumper)

                                  The reports states, “Elizabeth reported that she accidently put down this pony, ........, at the show.”

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                                  • #18
                                    Wouldn't you?
                                    Friend of bar.ka!
                                    Originally posted by MHM
                                    GM quote of the day, regarding the correct way to do things:
                                    "There's correct, and then there's correct. If you're almost correct, that means you're wrong."

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                                    • #19
                                      Absolutely adorable! Congratulations!!

                                      Also: sheep are great weed eaters! My sheep field looks like a golf course, and the US government is using them to control invasive weeds in certain national parks.

                                      The most important thing to remember about sheepkeeping is that sheep in general, and lambs in particular, are very vulnerable to dogs and coyotes. So you need great fencing and/or to keep her inside at night.

                                      Also, good for you for keeping her away from the horse feed and minerals. If you want to feed her a little something other than grass/weeds, a handful of alfalfa pellets probably wouldn't be a bad thing. My boys looooove their alfalfa pellets. But too much alfalfa can cause bloat. So, you know, moderation.

                                      Welcome to Club Sheep!

                                      Comment


                                      • #20
                                        That is so nice that you are taking care of lambie-pie, everyone needs a home where they are welcome!

                                        Is it too young to have been an "easter" gift that someone decided to dump after it was no fun anymore?

                                        I wish you great luck with the little lamb...

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