ÍæÅ¼½ã½ã

In Your Field: Kate Rowell - 'I'm sorry for what I said when we were working with sheep'

I don't understand how social media algorithms work, nor if your devices are really listening to you all of the time, but it certainly seems that way sometimes, when your social feeds show an advert that exactly fits your life.

clock • 2 min read
In Your Field: Kate Rowell - 'I'm sorry for what I said when we were working with sheep'
I experienced this very recently when an ad for a t-shirt appeared, sporting the phrase, 'I'm sorry for what I said when we were working with sheep' on it.

Although secret surveillance techniques probably aren't needed to figure out that marital relationships are certainly not helped by any jobs involving the white, woolly creatures, as I'm sure the arguments can be heard far and wide. 

There's been a lot of sheep work here recently. Lambing, treating for blowfly prevention, shearing, vaccinating, weaning, and drawing fat lambs, all just seem to merge into one other, and it often feels like we're hardly ever out of the sheep pens (or buchts as we call them here).  

The most recent job has been gathering and shearing the hill ewes, a necessary evil that nobody looks forward to, and, yesterday, there was a big, collective sigh of relief when the last one jumped off the clipping trailer. To avoid another gather, we keep the ewes and lambs in bye until the start of September when they will get a second Ovivac injection and then weaned. It's often quite a tight time for grass, but this year there's plenty, so hopefully the lambs will get a good boost and the ewes will go back to the hill in fine fettle. 

Cattle are having a relaxing summer, with much less stress than during the heat that we had this time last year, and the calves are growing well. Unfortunately, we have two pet calves, with one drinking litres of milk every day and growing like a mushroom, while the other has steadfastly refused to even look at the bottle and is about half the size. After weeks of battling three times a day to get her to take enough milk to keep her alive, she's finally eating enough grass and feed to let us ditch the bottle which means everyone involved is in a much better mood and she's stopped galloping off every time she sees one of us coming towards her.  

The bulls have just been swapped and will be out for one more cycle before we take them off. We've been steadily cutting the time they're out for the past few years and are now down to an eight-week bulling period, which will be appreciated in June next year when I can - hopefully - make it to the Highland Show without having to worry about cows calving. I'd love to get an even shorter window, but it's easier to get my husband's buy in for a gradual change rather than doing it all at once. After almost 25 years of marriage and farming together, I'm starting to understand the best psychological techniques for getting things done the way I'd like them to be. 

Maybe the imminent arrival of our matching t-shirts will mean that sheep work will progress more harmoniously in future, although I won't be betting on it. 

 

 

Heavy duty replacement troughs, for any parlour.

£±Ê°¿´¡

Delaval Blue Diamond 32/32

£±Ê°¿´¡

Second Hand Milking Equipment

£±Ê°¿´¡

More on In your field

In your field: Dan Hawes - "This has to be the most crucial time for us in the propagation world"

In your field: Dan Hawes - "This has to be the most crucial time for us in the propagation world"

Dan Hawes grew up on an arable farm in Suffolk and now produces strawberry and raspberry plants for the UK fruit market with Blaise Plants, sister company to Hugh Lowe Farms, Kent. The business grows outside, under tunnels and in glasshouses and produces more than four million plants a year. The arable side includes environmental schemes, with a mix of wheat, oilseed rape, beans and barley crops

clock 12 July 2025 • 3 min read
In your field: James Wright - "There may still be hope that the family farm tax, might yet be reversed"

In your field: James Wright - "There may still be hope that the family farm tax, might yet be reversed"

James and Isobel, with their two young children, recently bought their first farm, and plan to run beef and sheep over 13.8 hectares (34 acres), renting a further 44.5ha (110 acres). James works for tech firm Breedr as a product manager. You can follow them on Twitter @jpbwfarm.

clock 06 July 2025 • 2 min read
In your field: Dan Jones - "What's the takeaway? Sheep farming has a future – if we let it evolve"

In your field: Dan Jones - "What's the takeaway? Sheep farming has a future – if we let it evolve"

Dan Jones farms 650 ewes at the National Trust-owned Parc Farm, which sits on the Great Orme, a limestone headland which rises up 208 metres (682 feet) on the North Wales coast near Llandudno. His Farm Business Tenancy covers the 58 hectares (143 acres) at Parc Farm, plus 364ha (900 acres) of grazing rights on the hill

clock 05 July 2025 • 3 min read