* SE ; : : INS . . 2 “— 3 Bete = 2 Ap as Manuele Fe nae pA AD An AANA AA al aN, avy A; i J agli aa ah ) PEENWaontehGE A aAMA Rane ane <2 AAA RAR ~*annanannana f BANE ee A Se vn! MEAD Np! lay a AD NANA é SOS ve ve toa LNA NP NAL VA} Ny RAAAA a VAACIM AE AB eal nee AIAN i AA oda 6 is RIAN ay AN VARMA RGAANA, Danni Ra Agiee ACO ASWAR manana AAAARAAN bAP as Sab Raa ARORA AINA Walee aR Wanna ahaa, ls Be / 23S | 2D , i DA m A VAIO aa! NAS uN ‘ WANN AA ENA A AWAY WY" Ren VY’, WANA AA an pAnnn, f Rana he E , AANAAALVVAAAY Y Aas ADA } helf.2 64 S ae 5 Faas A were AN BAe ent cnn Ral Aaa eal nA p Arn a ~ vas AAA alan. ae RARAL HA ‘sae i The Shepherd’s Manual. A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON i eee ta a BP, DESIGNED ESPECIALLY FOR AMERICAN SHEPHERDS, HENRY STEWART. A ILLUSTRATED. NEW EDITION.—REVISED AND ENLARGED. NEW YORK: ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 245 BROADWAY. 1879. qs Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1878, by the ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, COND EN Ls: Sen a Cacaeeneeeial PACE IPREPAGE! spe eleicie sieielels oosdoas So0cq0a0b0000 poo0D00S RVs tare chere eiessic ore v-VI _ CHAPTER I. THE SHEEP AS AN INDUSTRIAL PRODUCT...........- Gaseuaecad 8- 11 Antiquity of Sheep Husbandry—The Future of Sheep Husbandry—Its Effects upon Agriculture—Demand for Mutton Sheep—Value of the Wool Product—Extent of Pasturage in America. CHAPTER IL. THE SUMMER MANAGEMENT OF A FLOCK..........-.2+2-2eeeees 11- 33 Selection of a Sheep Farm—Effects of Soils upon the Health of Sheep—What is a Good Pasture ?—Value of Certain Grasses—The Western Plains as Sheep Pasture— Pastures—Fodder Crops—Root Crops—Folding Sheep— Dog Guards. CHAPTER III. MANAGEMENT OF EWES AND LAMBS..............ecceceeeeecees 83- 49 Marking Sheep—Record for Breeders—Management of Rams—Care of Ewes—Care of Lambs—Selecting Lambs for Breeders—Prevention of Discase—Dipping Preven- tive of Parasites. CHAPTER IV. WINTER MANAGEMENT OF SHEEP. ....2.......00.0cecccecececees 49- 81 Barns and Sheds—Feed Racks—Feeding Value of Differ- ent Fodders, Roots and Grains—Experiments in Feeding— Profit of Feeding—Raising Early Lambs for Market— Feeding Sheep for Market—Valuc of Manure—Markets for Sheep. (3) IV THE SHEPHERD'S MANUAL. CHAPTER Y. BREEDING AND BREEDS OF SHEEP...........0+e-eceeecescennes 8i—142 THE How Breeds are Established—Improvement of Flocks— Cross Breeding—Breeding for Sex—Maxims for Breeders —Native Breeds—Improvement of the Merinos—The Me- rino Fleecee—Long- Wool Breeds—Medium and Short-Wool Breeds—Foreign Breeds—Cross-bred Sheep—American Cross-breeds. CHAPTER YI. STRUCTURE MAN DEUSESEOR.VOOU ee ena cicee et ee 142-167 The Method of Growth of Wool—Its Peculiar Structure —Its Composition—The Yolk—Classification of Wools— Character of Merino Wool—Washing Wool—Shearing— Packing and Marketing ihe Fleeces—Production of Wool in the World—Comparative Values of Wool in Different Countries—Fayorable Conditions for Producing Woolin the United States. CHAPTER VII. Toe ANATOMY AND DISEASES OF THE SHEEP................... 168-249 Physiology of the Sheep—The Teeth—The Boncs— The Vital Functions, Respiration, Circulation, and Digestion— The Causes and Prevention of Diseases of the Sheep—Dis- eases of the Respiratory Organs, of the Digestive Organs, of the Blood—Enzoétie Diseases—Epizoétic Diseases— Diseases of the Urinary and Reproductive Organs, of the Brain—Parasitical Diseases of the Intestines, of the Skin —Diseases of the Feet—Diseases incident to Lambing— Special Diseases—Diseases of Lambs. : TABLE OF APPROXIMATE EQUIVALENT MEASURES. ...ceseocoreee LooaLiTIES IN THE UNITED STATz3 SUITABLE FOR SHEEP-RAISING.. APPENDIX. 249 PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. The favorable comments by the agricultural press, and the nu- merous letters from private parties to the author, acknowledging indebtedness for the assistance received from this work, have been very gratifying, and with an acknowledgement of the kindness of his readers, the author offers a new edition of the work to the public. The recent enormous growth of the stock interests of the far West, and the many inquiries which have been made as to the various localities most favorable for sheep-keeping, have made it desirabie to add to the book an entirely new chapter, devoted altogether to a review of the advantages offered by different sec- tions of the country, for the rearing of the various races of sheep suited to them. An enlarged experience, since the first publica- tion of the volume, has only confirmed the views of the author in regard to some subjects then touched upon with much diffidence, but in honesty of judgment, and with deliberation. There is nothing in the views expressed in the first edition that he would materially modify, and the author feels that he can still more confidently than before encourage the young shepherd to accept this little manual as a guide and a counsellor. HACKENSACK, N. J., 1878. PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION. The following Manual is desiened to be a hand-book for Amer- ican shepherds and farmers. It is intended to be so plain that a farmer, or a farmer’s son, who has never kept a sheep, may learn from its pages how to manage a flock successfully, and to be so (5) VI THE SHEPHERD’S MANUAL. complete that cven the experienced shepherd may gather some suggestions from it. When the author, some years ago, began to keep sheep, he sought in vain amongst the published works a simple practical, comprehensive book upon sheep and sheep keep- ing, suited to his necessities. The excellent works upon the Merino and Fine Wool Husbandry by Mr. Randall, were the only ones to be obtained that were adapted for the use of an American shepherd, and these referred to a special branch of sheep husbandry which is becoming every year a less and less prominent one. The other books on this subject then extant, were either English works or compilations from them, and were out of date and incomplete. None of the works gave a description of the modern improved breeds of sheep which have of late become so deservedly popular; or any full or satisfactory account of the diseases of sheep, and the remedics proper for them under the modern systems of treat- ment which have grown out of the more accurate scientific knowl- edge of the present day; nor could any information as to the vastly increased scope of this branch of agricultural industry in America, be found in any book. It was necessary to learn by experience-—in this case, as in all others, a costly teacher—how to meet the needs of the modern improved sheep ir our climate and under our methods of culture. The results of personal experi- ences of some years with the characters of the various modern breeds of sheep, and the sheep-raising capabilities of many portions of our extensive territory and that of Canada, most of which have been visited with a view to the effects upon our sheep of the va- rying climate and different soils; and the careful study of the dis- eascs to which our sheep are chiefly subject, with those by which they may eventually be afflicted through unforeseen accidents; as well as the methods of management called for under our circum- stances, were finally gathered into the shape in which they are here presented to the shepherds of America, with the hope that they may be as acceptable and as useful to them as they would have been, when he first undertook the care of a flock, to THE AUTHOR. NEw YORK, 1876. The Shepherd’s Manual. CHAPTER I. THE SHEEP AS AN INDUSTRIAL PRODUCT. From the earliest ages the sheep has been a scurce of profit to mankind, and its keeping and rearing an important industry. Abel, the second son of Adam, chose sheep-herding as his employ- ment, and although his elder brother chose to cultivate the soil, the pastoral life became the favored occupation of the human race in its early periods, and the more toilsome tillage of the ground was followed from necessity rather than from choice. With a sparse population, a scarcity of labor, but at the same time an ample territory, the cultivation of flocks became in early times the readiest means of providing food and clothing, increasing the com- forts of man and of accumulating transferable wealth. Although at first sight it is a singular circumstance, yet on reflection it is seen to be a necessity of the case that the territory upon which the flocks of the ancient patriarchs were fed and tended, is still the home of shepherds, and that there, for forty centuries, flocks have wandered from pasture to pasture under the care of their nomadic proprietors. Where the physical features of the country were favorable to pasturage, there the first civilized occupation was that of keeping sheep, and so it remains to this day. In view of its bearing upon the future of sheep husbandry in the United States, it is important to remember this fact, that where peculiarly favorable physical features of the country were present, and the shepherd occupied the land, there the shepherd and his flock retain possession until this day. Thus, at the time of the conquest of Spain by the ancient Romans, that country was cele- brated for its flocks and the quality of its wool, and to-day the (7) 8 THE SHEPHERD’S MANUAL. Spanish Merino is equally celebrated, although through adventi- tious circumstances, but chiefly political disturbances, its pre-emi- nence has been lost to Spain, and other countries enjoy its fruits. As civilization progressed stage by stage, and garments of man- ufactured wool displaced those of skins, careful breeding bégan to improve the fleece, and varieties among sheep became fixed in type. Before the Christian era the fine wools of Italy were noted, and the fineness of the fleece was cultivated to a degree unknown to us of the present day. The sheep of that period were housed and clothed, their skins were oiled and moistened with wine, and their fleeces were combed and washed repeatedly, in order that the quality of the wool might be refined as far as pessible. Al- though this excessive refinement destroyed the vigor and impaired the constitution of the sheep, yet their descendants, -inferior in form, as might be expected, are still fine-wooled sheep. Thus far the improvement in sheep operated oniy towards refining the fleece, and the carcass was a secondary object, only cared for so far as it could serve as a vehicle for carrying the wool. The lamb of the flock was considered a choice morsel, but the mature sheep was neglected as an article of food. It is only in recent times that the excellence of mutton has been made an object in the improve- ment of sheep. At the present it is only in sparsely populated ccuntries that sheep are cultivated for wool alone, while in densely peopled localities the production of mutton is of greater consider- ation than that of wool, or at least is of equal value to it. At the present time, proximity to, or distance from market, decides the choice of breeds, and in fact this consideration alone has in some cases been the moving influence in the creation of new varieties or breeds specially adapted to certain localities. In asimilar man- ner the necessities of sheep-breeders have led them to make some important modifications in their methods of agriculture, so that while the character of their flocks has been changed for the better, their agriculture has been improved, the product of the land in- creased, and its value advanced, until profitable sheep culture has becume synonymous with the most profitable farming. In fact, the character of the farm has been indexed by the character of the flock reared upon it. This improvement has in greater part oc- curred only in connection with the rearing of mutton sheep. To feed these heavy bodied sheep profitably, it has been found neces- sary to raise large crops of cheap roots and luxuriant green crops; and to raise these crops, the most skillful tillage, the cleanest cul- ture, and the most liberal manuring have been requisite.. In this way the product of the soil has been vastly increased, and the PRODUCTION OF MUTTON. bakes!) sheep, directly and indirectly, has been both the gainer and the means of gain. The demand for mutton as an agreeable and cheap food is stead- ily increasing. The markets of the city of New York alone re- quire more than one million sheep per annum. Farmers formerly habituated to the daily use of pork are becoming mutton eaters, and the convenience of a few sheep upon the farm merely to sup- ply the family table is now appreciated to a much greater extent than ever before. This cultivation of sheep for mutton alone is a branch of agriculture which is yearly becoming more important. As yet we possess no native variety of mutton sheep. The carcass of the ‘‘native” sheep, so called—but which is really a heterogeneous mixture of all those breeds which have been brought to this coun- try, and which having been permitted to increase promiscuously, have perpetuated only their poorest qualities—is unworthy the name of mutton; and those flocks of imported sheep of beiter character, such as the Southdowns, Leicesters, or Cotswolds, ave either allowed to deteriorate, or are kept for breeding purposcs. It is very true that a really good carcass of mutton rarely finas its way to our markets, except from Canada, where almost the sole attention is given to breeding sheep for mutton. At the same time there is a demand for mutton, both of that substantial kind which is represented by legs of 16 to 20 lbs. in weight, handsome saddles and gcod shoulders, and that more delicately flavored kind repre- sented by the small legs or quarters of the Welsh sheep. Unfortunately this fact is not generally known to farmers, and if it were, it is equally unfortunate that we as yet have not the kind of sheep to meet the demand. Before this excellent and wholesome food can become as popular as it ought to be, and sheep keeping can become as profitable as it may be, farmers must be better informed as to the character of the sheep needed, the manner in which they may be bred, and the methods by which they may be fitted for the market. This necessary information must include a knowledge of the modern breeds which have usurped the place of the old kinds, and the peculiar management of the new races of sheep, as well as of the special crops needed for fodder, and the metbods of cultivating them. Heretofore in place of this practical information, American farmers have been treated to long dissertations upon the origin and history of the sheep, and descriptions of foreign breeds which are of no possible value or interest to them. The sheep, in addition to its value as a food producer, yields to its owner an annual tribute in the shape of its fleece, which in the 10 THE SHEFHERD’S MANUAL. aggregate is a most important contribution to the comfort and in- dustry of the people. In 1870 there were nearly 30 millions of sheep in the United States, and the wool production in that year amounted to 120 millicn pounds, estimating the average weight of the fleeces at 4 pounds each. The value of this wool in the farm- ers’ hands would reach at the lowest estimate, $40,000,000. But so far from being anywhere equal to the demand for this staple, the supply was less than our yearly needs by a quantity equal to a value of more than $40,000,000, and wool to this amount is annu- ally imported from foreign countries. Besides this in wool, there is annually imported with it the value of $20,000,000-in foreign la- bor, which has been expended in manufacturing wool -into cloth and other woolen goods. Our own necessities, therefore, demand an increase in the supply of wool equal to our present production. This wool, if produced here, would not only use up a large quan- tity of corn now thrown upon the markets of the world, and therefore enhance the value of that which would remain for dis- posal; but its manufacture into cloths and goods would employ a large number of persons who are now engaged in raising agricul- tural products for sale, and are therefore in active competition with other farmers. The encouragement of sheep cultivation, therefore, has a national importance, and is a subject which bears directly upon the interests of farmers. To increase the wool pro- duct toa par with the necessities of the country at the present time, would alone involve the passage through their hands of $60,000,000 yearly—an immense sum, which now goes into the pockets of foreigners, instead of those of our own people. The scope for an increase in our wool product is comparatively boundless. A full third of the territory of the United States is a grand sheep pasture of the most favorable character. Vast plains bearing abundance of the most nutritious herbage, in the most healthful climate, and the very best conditions for the profitable breeding of fine and middle wool sheep, and which are valucless for any other than pastoral purposes, stretch from the 100th me- ridian for 500 miles west to the Rocky Mountains, and from north to south for 1,500 miles. In addition to this vast tract, upon which a hundred million sheep could feed and thrive with ease, there are immens? mountain ranges, extensive valleys, and again beyond these, great plains, altogether covering a still larger area, of which a ereat portion is admirably fitted for the pasturing of sheep. With so great a scope for the cheap production of wool, it seems to be a strange thing, that instead of exporting largely of this staple, as we might and should do, the United States on the conirary is one PRODUCTION OF WOOL. 11 of the largest buyers in foreign markets. Again, on the Atlantic seaboard there are millions of acres of land now useless that would, if cleared and cultivated, make excellent sheep farms for the pro- duction of the choicest mutton sheep. There are numberless salt marshes upon which sheep, naturally fitted through long years of adaptation for just such pasturage, could be made to yield mutton of the most delicate flavor. There are also hills and rocky moun- tains upon whose sweet hervaye hardy races of sheep could be made to thrive with profit; and further inland, highly cultivated farms, where heavy crops of green fodder and roots could be raised, that might carry flocks of large framed sheep, yielding combing wool—now so much used in clothing materials for both sexes, and the demand for which is always ahead of the supply. And further south, where it is possible to pasture sheep the year round, but where those which are now kept are so neglected that some of them are never shorn, there is also vast room to change the overdone cotton production for the equally easy but more profitable production of wool which in that climate, by the exercise of proper care, may be grown of the finest quality of staple. What a vast field opens upon our view when we consider the extent of the territory which we possess suitable for sheep cul. ture; and what profit and increase of national wealth is there in this business to those who undertake it as the occupation of their lives—not only for a short period and intermittingly, and then to be abandoned for some other temporary speculative business—but with a desire and determination to succeed through the exercise of patience, perseverance, and skill. CHAPTER IL. SUMMER MANAGEMENT OF SHEEP. The selection of a suitable farm should be the first care of a person who intends to devote his time and capital to the rearing of sheep. To become a successful shepherd, requires that a person should have a liking for the business, and possess tact, patience, and perseverance sufficient to resist the temptations which may arise at seasons of depression to abandon it for some other tempo- rarily mere promising pursuit. Having a determination to stick 12 THE SHEPHERD'S MANUAL. to his flock, he must have a farm suited to its special needs or it willnot thrive. Sheep cannot bear damp; and undrained pastures are fatal to their welfare. Luxuriance of herbage is not generally favorable unless the land is heavily stocked and the pasture kept short and closely cropped. Old permanent meadows, in which a variety of grasses are found, are better than artificial meadows which form part of a rotation with other crops. With a portion of such permanent meadow, there may be many cultivated crops grown upon the other portions of the farm upon which the sheep may be folded with benefit both to themselves and the land. The land most suitable for sheep is one that is naturally drained, with a sandy loam or gravelly soil and subsoil, and which bears spontaneously short, fine, herbage, largely mixed with white clover. It should be rolling, and may be hilly in character rather than flat and level. Any low spots or hollows in which aquatic or marsh plants grow, are very objectionable, and should be thoroughly drained. One such spot upon an otherwise admirable farm may infect a flock with deadly disease. No domestic animal is more readily affected by adverse circumstances than the sheep, and none has less spirit or power to resist them. Virgil, the ancient poet, a close observer of such matters, says of them, “‘ Oves semper infei‘a pecus,”’ (Sheep are always an unhappy flock), and many shephercs since his day have found reason to hold the same belief. But the experienced sheepmaster has no fear on this score. He knows that a reputation for success with sheep is ‘“‘never gained without merit, nor lost without deserving,’ and that failure is not want of luck, as is so frequently declared, but the consequence of ignor- ance or bad management. The careful shepherd will not wait to cure, he is prompt to prevent; and every defeat is made a new lesson for study and an example for future avoidance. It is by long experience that shepherds have learned that the first requi- site for success in their business is, the choice of a farm upon which their flocks will enjoy perfect health, and that dryness of soil and of air is the first necessity for their well being. By a careful and judicious choice ia this respect, most of the ills to which sheep are subject, with all their contingent losses to their owncrs, are avoided. The character of the soil upon which sheep are pastured has a great influence in modifying the character of the sheep. Upon the kind of soil of course depends the character of the herbage upon which the flock feeds. Certain soils, such as those consist- ing of decomposed granite or feldspar, and which are rich in pot- ash, are not general:y favorable forsheep. Even turnips raised on ON SOILS. 13 such lands sometimes affect the sheep injuriously, producing dis- ease under which they waste away, become watery about the eyes, fall in about the flanks, and assume a generally unhealthy appear- ance. Upon removal to a limestone, or a dry sandstone soil, sheep thus affected, improve at once and rapidly recover. The lambs, as might be expected, are most easily affected, and many are yearly lost by early death upon lands of an unfavorable character. As a rule, lands upon which granite, feldspathic or micaceous rocks intrude, or whose soils are derived from the degradation of such rocks, should be avoided by the shepherd. Such soils are, however, not without their uses, and fortunately are excellently adapted to the dairy. The soils most to be preferred are sandstone and lime- stone lands, of a free, dry, porous character, upon which the finer grasses flourish. The soils which are derived from rocks called ‘carboniferous, which accompany coal deposits, or are found in the ‘regions in which coal is mined, are those upon which sheep have been bred with the most success. The criginal home of the Lei- -cester sheep, as well as that of the famous Shropshires, is on the red sandstone; the Lincoln is raised on the alluvial soils based on limestone; the Cotswold has had its home for centuries on the limestone Cotswold hills; the Southdown, Hampshiredown, and Oxforddowns, are native to the chalk hills and downs of southern England; the Scotch Cheviot and the hardy black-faced Scotch sheep thrive on sandstone hills and mountains of trap rocks which rise amongst them ; the fine wools of Yorkshire are produced on magnesian limestone soils; and to come to our own soils, we find the American Merino reaching perfection on the limestone hills of Vermont, beneath which fine marbles are quarried. Unfortu- nately this is the only instance we possess of having given a local habitation to a race of sheep in America; but how soon we shall have produced or acclimated several breeds of sheep, which will take their peculiarities from the locality in which they are bred and raised, is only a question of time. Peat or marsh lands are unfavorable for sheep farms. Salt marshes near the coast, how- ever, may be excepted from this general condemnation, as the saline herbage acts as a specific against some of the parasitic dis- eases—the liver-rot mainly—to which sheep are subject upon marshy pastures. The Romney-marsh sheep of England are bred successfully upon the alluvial soils of reclaimed marshes, and pro- duce good wool and a heavy carcass. The gigantic Lincoln, the largest sheep bred, originated and thrives in perfection upon drained alluvial soils. The dry, friable nature and porous character of the soil has as 14 THE SHEPHERD’S MANUAL. much to do with the health and growth of sheep as the geological character of the rocks upon which it is based, or from which it has been derived. The census returns of England show that the high- est percentage of sheep to the 100 acres, is found precisely where the soil is naturally drained and dry, and the lowest, where clay abounds, and damp, cold soils with rank, coarse herbage are gen- eral. In our own country, although the time has been far too short as yet for this condition to operate largely, we find the same fact curiously developed, and Ohio and western Pennsylvania, with their extensive coal bearing formations underlying dry roll- ing fields, possess more sheep than any other district, while New York, Illinois, Indiana, and Michigan, which cover an extensive ‘deposit of limestones and sandstones, with naturally dry soils, come next on the list. The vast stretch of prairies in the Mississippi Valley, and of plains west of the Missouri to the Rocky Moun- tains, chiefly underlaid with limestones and sandstones, and especi- ally remarkable for a dry, porous soil, which bears a rich carpet of the best sheep pastures in the world, have already proved them- selves to be well adapted to the successful growth of flocks bear- ing fine and medium wools. The rich alluvial valleys of the east- ern rivers where naturally or artificially drained, have been found to be fitted for the production of large bodied sheep bearing the lustrous combing wools. All these localities with the hills and valleys of the Middle States will in course of time have their flocks suitable in character to the circumstances in which they are kept. But it will only be in consequence of persistence in careful breed- ing and culture, that the final type for each locality will be reached; for while the effects of soil and locality are unavoidable and imperative, the shepherd must be able to discover these effects and aid in giving them their due development if early success is to be secured. But in whatever locality it may be, if the soil is not naturally drained, profitable sheep farms may be sought in vain. The profit from sheep raising as a special business will not permit of high-priced lands. Where sheep are kept only as a branch of general farming, it may pay to drain the soil artificially ; but without drainage, natural or artificial, sheep cannot thrive. The sheep must have a dry foot or disease follows, The character of the herbage depends upon that of the soil, and the character of the sheep is governed by that of the pasture. It is a very casual observer who thinks that all kinds of grass are the same, and are equally proper for sheep. The sheep itself knows better than this, and every shepherd has learned that his sheep will seek particular spots in preference to others in the ON PASTURES. 15 same field. It has been well said that ‘‘ the dead earth and the living animal are but links of the sare chain of natural existences, the plant being the connecting bond by which they are tied to- gether.” The flesh and wool of the sheep, therefore, are but pro- ducts from the soil, and contain nothing but what has existed in the plants which the sheep have consumed. When wool is clean -and dry, 100 pounds of it contain 17 pounds of nitrogen, and 5 pounds of sulphur. When the pasture is sufficiently nutritious and the sheep is in good health, a quantity of soapy, greasy matter, called yolk, adheres to the fleece. When this is abundant it is a proof that the food of the sheep is healthful and sufficient. When it is deficient, and the wool is harsh and dry to the touch, it is a sign that the sheep’s health is suffering from defective nutriment. This yolk contains a large proportion of potash. To be properly nutritious, the food must contain this needed sulphur and pot- ash, along with nitrogen and other necessary matters. Jae perly placed, they O6< form a hurdle the end of which looks like the letter X. eStats SSS. ike the otter XE Se KX WSoS< PSL \ oe <5 5 Y, se NN 4 The engraving @: iC SK £N i O Vir’ 29 : AZAMNVSOL SOC < DIWISSSKK KAO shows how these Ce, 0: Dw ERS hurdles are made \ NS <= ‘NUVA GILLVYO HO daaHS V AOR NAVA—'9; 58 THE SHEPHERD’S MANUAL. litter daily thrown down in the shed. Hardwood sawdust, dry seasoned peat or swamp muck, forest leaves, dried spent tan- bark, long or cut straw, chaff, or even sand, make very good litter and absorbents. If a supply of these materials can be procured, sufficient for daily use in a crowded pen or yard, the straw, which would otherwise be needed for this purpose, may with great economy be reserved for fodder. If straw or corn-fodder cut into small pieces, is fed in the racks once a day, there will be a certain portion pulled out on to the floor which will add to the litter. If straw is used for litter, it should be cut into chaff, which will much facilitate the removal of the manure in the spring. This is especially convenient if pea straw is used, for when a quantity of pea straw and manure is trodden together, they form such a tangled mass that it is a most tiresome labor to fork it up and re- move it. Corn-stalks should not be thrown under foot for the same reason. If it is thought proper to remove the litter and dung periodically, every week for instance, then the floor should afterwards receive a heavy coating of dry litter. In case the ma- nure is removed, it should not on any account be heaped in the yard. It will undergo an active fermentation and become hot, giving forth clouds of vapor in damp weather, and at all times pungent gases. Some of the sheep will choose the manure heap to lie upon at nights, and every one that is suffered to do this will inevitably sicken, and become affected with catarrh or pneumonia, or lose its wool in patches. Either the litter should not be cleaned out at all, or it should be removed toa distance from the yards. It is easy to manage matters either way, so that the air of the shed will be pure and free from offensive smell, if proper attention is given, and the shepherd is watchful and careful of the condition of the floors of the shed. The feed-racks should be so made that the sheep can procure their feed without tearing the wool from their necks or filling their fleeces with dust, chaff, or hay-seed. The floor of the loft should be made close and tight, using either matched boards or double boards laid so as to break joints, and prevent the dropping of dust from above. = By, 5 = x Wong ea tewen oe camo 14.4 10.0 68.8 5.5 201 Odts Biveaneewacc seen ocean een 14.3 12.0 60.9 10.3 3.0 Barley acc crsieieisteen co ortocwe eon ene 14.3 9.0 65.9 8.5 2.5 Rea iasicn'eomisene ieee ersisrfeeiete 14.3 22.4 62.3 9.2 2.5 UY Oo Pi sieh anne msiodr oaisletomioctn inert 14.3 11.0 69.2 3.5 20 BEANS eacce: | sicher cham cere 14.5 25.5 45.5 a5 3.5 Buckwheatia.c ewe eee venir 14.0 9.0 59.6 15.0 2.4 Cotton-seed-cake without husks..... 8.3 41.0 | *33.4 9.0 8.3 Peanut: Caker . Syl tier on dig. Oa 11.0 40.00 | t88.5 4.5 6.0 Linseed Cake.. 1125 28.3 41.3 11.0 V9 Bran, (Wheat)... 13.1 14.0 50.0 17.8 iyo | Bran nGRyic) seen evie se ces ee eee 12.5 14.5 3.5 15.0 4.5 Shorts, (Wiheat) foso.ccoanacsecsstnee 11.65 11.%5 64.42 8.29 4.2 Malis proutssen ene nee eer heeee 8.0 23.0 44.7 17.5 6.8 3. CARA RS OCS A HOM RE aA Dele 4.2 8.8 76.3 8.0 22% * Of this 16 per cent, consists of oil. t+ Of this 11 per cent consists of fat and oil. The analyses here given, however, are but an obscure guide as regards the comparative values of the different substances for pro- ducing fat. It is very important to arrive at a clear idea of this in feeding sheep, because the quality of the wool depends greatly upon the secretion of a requisite amount of yolk which consists in great part of oil and a matter approaching in character to wax, to say nothing of the desirability of rapidly producing fat. The fat-forming elements in any article of food consist of starch, sugar, gum, oil, and fat, all carbonaceous matters, or matters rich in car- bon, with the addition of certain proportions of hydrogen and oxygen. The chemical composition of these elements is very sim- ilar, and in some of them is nearly identical. Thus an animal fed upon starch or sugar, may beconie fat, and it is well known that bees fed upon sugar are able to produce either honey or wax from this food. In the processes of digestion and assimilation, starch, sugar, and gum, are changed to fat. This fat is either consumed in the process of respiration, or is stored up in the tissues of the body, and increases the weight of the carcass. But in the con- sumption of food rich in starch, a much larger portion is necessary to produce a given weight of fat, or a given result in the process of respiration, than is required of a food rich in fat or oil. The relative values of fat or oil, and starch, as nutritive elements, is as one of the former to two and a half, nearly, of the latter, or exact- . ly, as 10 ig to 24; that is, 10 Ibs. of oil or fat will go as far in pro- ducing fat or in maintaining respiration, and the natural heat of SELECTION OF FOOD. 65 the body, in which process carbon is used up, as 24 Ibs. of starch or sugar. Thus any food that contains 10 per cent of fat is of equal value to another which contains 24 per cent of starch. On ref- erence to the table it will be found that corn contains 68.8 per cent of fat formers, while cotton-seed-cake contains only 33 per cent. But corn contains 5 per cent of fat, and cotton-seed-cake 16 per cent. The relative values of the two substances will therefore be as follows: Starch, Fat, | Equivalent Total Sugar, etc. or § to Starch. Fat-formers. ~ COTTE cea ees 63.8 5.0 or 12.0 45.8 Cotton-seed-meal ..... i 3) 16. or 38.4 55.9 If the quantities of flesh-forming elements of each are added to the above totals, it will be seen that cotton-seed-cake having four times as much flesh-formers as corn, is the cheaper food of the two. Again, whole flax-seed contains 55 per cent of fat-form- ing elements, but as 87 per cent of these consists of oil, which is equivalent to 88.8 per cent of starch, the total fat-forming power of flax-seed is therefore equal relatively to 106.8 per cent in pure starch. Cotton-seed free from the husk, and flax-seed, are there- fore the most nutritive articles of feed for fattening. It is worth while here to call attention to the high value of the peanut after the oil is expressed, as food for stock animals we possess. As a substitute for oil-cake-meal where it cannot be procured conve- niently, the following mixture has been suggested, viz: Groundbbinsee dieser nysicisiciesisine row sieisie 6 sce ets eiel- 40 lbs. IWihea tibiae sie oce ce cgels atatessele Weve sina 60 *¢ HI OUTOL PD OM GU. Rei oni ese Notre opaita cle eaaie e siaeleersiz 4 ‘“ —10¢ Ibs. The constituents of which per 109 lbs. are: HMlesh=formersss(allbumien)) pene. cscs octeterel- ols stale 277 Ibs. Hal TOmaerssy (Late leper Cent) pacjercieisterte stele clei) BIL es ASHVOT NAIM HV labels taeriysietieenietelelerieisleteieils are Ges WEL tapsdbtnd coon dasiee Bopeaecorte nSeanuenorente 15 ‘* —100 Ibs. This makes a most valuable combination of feeding substances for a young growing animal, or a ewe giving milk. The greater nu- tritive value of fat is explained by physiologists from the fact that it is directly digested and assimilated,and enters into the circula- tion and nutrition of the animal without change, except a very fine mechanical division of its particles. On the other hand, starch and sugar undergo a series of chemical transformations in the course of which much of their volume and effect are expended. In choosing a variety of food then, for a special object, as for instance the feeding of a young growing animal; or the fattening of a mature animal and the sustenance of a sheep that produces a 66 THE SHEPHERD’S MANUAL. fleece rich in oil or yolk, as that of a pure-bred Merino, those foods which would furnish abundant flesh should be chosen for the one, and those rich in starch and oil for the others. By thus choosing judiciously and skillfully, there is an economy in the cost of the food, and the object sought is gained at the least expense. Much may be gained by varying or mixing the food of an ani- mal so as to stimulate the appetite; for a healthy animal will in- crease in weight in proportion to the food consumed so long as di- gestion and assimilation are perfect. If a sheep only eat 3 Ibs. of hay per day, but will eat and digest in addition 6 lbs. of sliced turnips or beets, with a pound of bran sprinkled upon them, a manifest advantage is gained. If changing the hay for straw, 10 lbs. of turnips and 1 1b. of bran or oil-cake-meal can be consumed, the money value of the food may be reduced, and the sheep be equally well fed. In estimating the amount of a sheep’s food, it is necessary to take into consideration the age and condition of the animal. Whether it be in a growing state or in a state of maturity, its weight, and also the drain upon its vitality, as in the case of a ram serving a number of ewes daily ; or a ewe in lamb, or suckling a lamb or a pair of them. On this account it is absolutely necessary to grade the flock and provide different quarters for those which need special feeding or care. As a guide for the estimation of a proper quantity of food, and for a judicious selection of the kinds which may be fed, it will be useful to consider the following instances. In an experiment recently made by Dr. Voelcker, the chemist of the Royal Agricultural Society of England, four sheep were fed for seven weeks upon 196 Ibs. of clover hay, 49 Ibs. of linseed-cake-meal, and 8,743 Ibs. of mangels; equal to a daily ra- tion for each of 1 lb. of clover hay, 4 ounces of linseed-cake-meal, and 194 Ibs. of mangels. The nutritive elements contained in this daily ration were equiva- lent to 44 ounces of flesh formers, 534 ounces of fat formers, and 42 ounces of mineral matter. Upon this mixed diet the sheep thrived and gained weight as follows: Weight at Weight at Gain in commencement. end of 7 weeks. weight. INOplbsogoooge 153 lbs. 1701/, lbs. 17/, lbs. IN@; Booovsses mygaess 1511/, “ 171, “ INO: Bijoct ei» WO) HST ee ices No. 4..0..8- 135 “ Ib py Fe 2) EXPERIMENTS IN FEEDING. 67 The gain on the average was equal to one pound in three days; or an increase in weight of one pound for every 56 Ibs. of food fed ; or for every 62 ounces of dry matter contained in the food. This is a very good instance of a typical fattening food for an or- dinary sheep of this size. The results of a large number of expcr- iments made in feeding roots to sheep, go to show that 150 Ibs. of ruta-bagas, or mangels, fed in open yards, or 100 lbs. fed in yards with sheds for protection, may be expected to produce one pound of increase in live weight. When 14 lbs. of a mixed feed of oil- cake and peas were given daily, along with 18} lbs. of ruta-bagas, fed under shelter, the gain was equal to 2 lbs. for every 100 lbs. of roots, and 44 ibs. of mixed peas and oil-cake; showing that 44 Ibs. of peas and oil-cake produced an increase of one pound in the live weight. A number of experiments in feeding clover hay with linseed-oil-cake-meal, have established the fact that, allowing 6 lbs. of oil-cake-meal for one pound of increased live weight, it required 11 to 18 lbs. of hay to make an equal gain. In feeding peas and beans with roots and hay, 8 Ibs. of the mixed grain was found to produce an increase in weight of one pound. When oats were fed with the roots, there was one pound of increased weight for 7 Ibs. of the grain. When barley was substituted, 6 Ibs. of the grain produced a gain of one pound. These interesting experiments are recorded in the Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society, Vol. I, p. 169; Vol. VII, p. 295; Vol. VIII, pp. 27, 28, and 256; Vol. X, p. 358, and the Highland Society’s Transactions; and are sub- stantiated by experiments made by Messrs. Lawes an Gilbert, of Rothamstead, in which they found that 2724 Ibs. oil-cake, 2524 Ibs. clover hay, and 3,753 Ibs. ruta-bagas, fed together, produced 100 Ibs. of increase. These results must of course be accepted as subject to variations in the quality of the various feeds, the kind and condition of the sheep, the state of comfort and repose in which they are kept, and the care and attention given to them. But making every allowance for contingencies, it may be safe to estimate from these results, that the relative quantities of the differ- ent feeds required to produce one pound of flesh, are as follows Ruta-bagas fed in open yards.............cecccecece : uta Bab ia fed ander eovas eel epeyayete leVereiaret ete’ ciel stehaiovaieior ae He Goodiclovermhayersacace aneccetaipre cen aneo eck. 1p) Gs BeaniefOrs Pease mcois kore nes Co Serr eee ee neem Sie Oatsraes 2.7 oes tee ember oi siecle acu ase sas? (¢ 0 LSE Alehy saben pore ocean TSO B Ocoee Tar ne ee oe eee 6“ Linseed-oil-cake-meal.................0% Boleisistee cc'e 6 a Linseed-oil-cake-meal, and peas mixed....... ...... 4366 The last quantity mentioned, curiously enough corroborates the 68 THE SHEPHERD’S MANUAL personal experience of many shepherds, and the remark heretofore made to the effect that much is often gained by varying or mixing the diet of sheep. In this instance the same effect is gained by the use of three-fourths the quantity of the mixed feed, as by the whole quantity when given separately. The actual money cost of the feed may thus be estimated nearly enough for all practical purposes. In estimating the values of the kinds of food more commonly used in the United States and Canada, there are bat few really trustworthy data to depend upon, as the careful experi- mental feeding of animals for scientific information, has rarely been attempted. We have nevertheless amongst the current agri- cultural literature of the day, many recorded results contributed by careful and eminentiy capable and trustworthy men. From amongst these the following have been selected as being practical and to the purpose. In an article communicated to the Country Gentleman, by the Hon. George Geddes, of Fairmount, N. Y., in May, 1875, are given, the cost of feeding, and the gain in weight of 290 sheep fed by Mr. O, M. Watkins, of Onondaga County, during the previous winter, and particularly the cost, etc., during the month of January. The flock consisted of 100 grades, being half Merino and half Cotswold; another 100 that were Merinos, and 90 were called full-blooded Cotswolds, (probably high grades). All these sheep were fed alike, each having one pound of corn daily —half of it fed early in the morning, the other half at sunset. Straw and chaff were fed during the day, and one feeding of hay at night. The corn was worth 80 cents for 60 pounds, the hay $10 a ton. The quantity of hay fed was reported as equal to 1.3 pounds to each sheep per day—making 40 pounds for the month, worth 20 cents. The corn for the same time was worth 41 cents, making the cost of corn and hay for each sheep for the month, 61 cents. The 100 Merino and Cotswold grades increased from 1174 lbs. each to 1284 pounds, this being a gain for each sheep of 10% pounds, and making the cost of each pound 5.67 cents. The 100 Merinos weighed Jan. 1, 944 pounds each, and Feb. 1, 1014 pounds— gaining 74 pounds each, at a cost of 8.4 cents. The 100 so-called full-blooded Cots- wolds weighed 118 pounds each Jan. 1, and Feb. 1, 123}—gaining only 54 pounds each, at a cost of 11.6 cents per pound. Upon these facts, Mr. Geddes comments as follows: ‘‘ The manure made during the time by these sheep, I consider worth more than the manure that would have been made by the same number of pounds of beef cattle. Thirty-two steers, each weighing 1,000 pounds, would almost exactly equal the total number of pounds of these PROFIT IN FEEDING. 69 three flocks of sheep when they were weighed in the yards on the ist day of January. All the labor involved in feeding and taking care of the sheep, would not equal that of cleaning the stables for the steers. Mr. Watkins purchased the 290 sheep well, and sold them well, and he reports his winter’s doings with them as follows: Cost of 290 sheep, (nearly 4c. per Ib.),..... $1,260 61 348 0 do. 485 bushels of corn, at 80c.......... 0 COsseaLSeLOns OL ayaya LO! rcryoicteleysialetelateye 180 00 $1,738 61 Feb. 28th, sold 270 at $8 each.............. 2,160 00 do. do. 18 culls, $4 each........... 2 00 Two sheep got cast ; sold pelts for $2 each. 400 2,286 00 Brofiteencricceemcleosene neces wee rca tees $497 39 “This pays over $1.71 for the trouble of buying and selling and risk on each sheep, if we call the manure pay for the labor of caring for the sheep. The price of hay is here very low this season, but corn is very high. Straw and chaff we consider as of but little value for manure, unless worked over by the feet of some animal, and used as an absorbent for their manure. For this reason we credit the sheep with the work of converting a large quantity of straw and chaff into available food for plants. ‘““T do not give Mr. Watkins’ experience as an average, for it is far better than any average that he can make for a series of years. Nor do I think it is by any means conclusive as between the breeds of sheep that he fed. The grade Merino and Cotswold I sold him the 2ist day of last December. They were all ewes, 2 and 3 years old, and were a very even, and in all respects a desira- ple lot. The other flocks I did not see, but I suppose, from in- formation, that they were not so even or desirable ; and sheep here usually called full-blooded Cotswolds, come from Canada or the border, and are not very good, perhaps they are mostly the culls of the flocks they came from. After all reasonable allowances have been made, the lesson of this winter’s work of Mr. Watkins is certainly that sheep are much more profitable makers of meat than steers, such as can be bought in Buffalo in the fall of the year, and they are still better manufacturers of straw and other coarse forage into manure.” Both the facts here given, and the relator’s comments, are very valuable. From the statement as to feed and gain in weight, the following deductions as to the value of the corn fed for producing increase of weight, may be made. Taking the three flocks, we have the following results for each, accepting the feeding value of hay as previously given, as a basis for a portion of the increase: 70 THE SHEPHERD’S MANUAL. GRADE MERINO AND COTSWOLD, AVERAGE GAIN, 102 LBS. Feed consumed. Gain in weight. lbs. of feed for 1 1b. of gain. 40 Ibs. of hay. 31/, lbs. 12 ibs. 30 1bs. of corn. @1/. Ibs. 4 lbs. MDRINOS, AVERAGE GAIN, ‘!/, LBS. Feed consumed. Gain in weight. lbs. of feed for 11b. of gain. 40 Ibs. hay. 31/4 Ibs. 12 Ibs. 30 lbs. corn. 4 Ibs. 7/2 lbs. COTSWOLDS, AVERAGE GAIN, 5!/, LBS, Feed consumed. Gain in weight. los. of feed for 1 1b. of gain. 40 lbs. hay. ©1/, Ibs. 12 Ibs. 30 lbs. corn. 2 Ibs. 15 lbs. These different flocks were evidently uneven in quality, and as Mr. Geddes, who sold the first flock to Mr. Watkins, is an excellent and experienced farmer and stock feeder, it may easily be sup- posed that the sheep were in excellent condition and well pre- pared for fattening. The productive value of corn, in the case of this flock, may well be considered as exaggerated, as in the other instances it would be diminished by reason of the poorer quality of the sheep. A mean may therefore be taken, and the gain result- ing from feeding the corn estimated as between the two gains of 4and 74, thus giving an average of about 6 lbs., and bringing corn to an equality of value with barley or linseed cake, if not showing it to be superior to either. If the result of feeding the first flock be taken as the basis for the estimate, it would certainly show corn to be a feed of the highest value for fattening sheep; but one result can hardly serve as a basis upon which to found sucha rule. Mr. R. J. Swan, of Geneva, N. Y., in a communica- tion in the Third Vol. of Rural Affairs, stated his plan of winter feeding; he gives to each hundred fattening sheep, two bushels, (126 lbs.), of corn, or the same quantity of oil-cake-meal per day, with wheat straw in racks three times a day, up to the 1st day of March ; afterwards feeding hay instead of straw, and reducing the corn or oil-cake-meal one-half. The lambs are fed hay three times a day, with three pecks of oil-cake-meal, or corn-meal, per 100. It is to be presumed that hay is fed ad libitum, although this account would have been more satisfactory had the quantity fed been stated. In a prize essay by Mr. Jurian Winne, of Albany County, N. Y., the following hints for the winter feeding of sheep are given: “ By feeding liberally with roots, and not too much grain, during the first week at least, the change from green feed to dry will be less apt to affect the sheep. In feeding, unless a person can do it himself, which is very seldom the case, the feeder should METHOD OF WINTER FEEDING. 71 be instructed with great care, how much grain is to go to each yard or stable according to the animals it contains. An over-feed at the commencement is almost sure to bring on the scours, and after the sheep are over it, it will take at least two wecks’ good feeding to put them where they started from. My mode, to avoid mistakes, is to number my yards and stables, and count the sheep in each yard and stable—allowing to each sheep one-half pint of grain per day to start with, unless they have been fed grain pre- viously, when I allow a little more. I then make out a schedule thus: No. 1—60 sheep at one-half pint per day is 15 quarts, which divided into two feeds, is 74 quarts to a feed; so I write on the schedule, ‘ No. 1—60 sheep must have 74 quarts at a feed morning and night,—No. 2 at the same rate according to number, and so on until I get them all. This paper is tacked up in the place where the feed is kept, and by going with the feeder a few times to show him and see that he makes no mistakes, if he is a good man he can do it as well as the farmer himself. As soon as the feed is to be increased, a new schedule is made out accordingly, and so on, until the sheep are fed one quari each per day, when I consider them on full feed, especially if the feed is corn, beans, or oil-meal, or a mixture of either. If oats or buckwheat compose part of their feed, they should have a little more. Regularity of hours is very important. Sheep should not be fed one morning at five o'clock, the next at six, and the third at seven. Our rule is this: Grain and oil-meal are fed at half-past five A.m. As soon as the grain is finished, hay is given—no more than the sheep will eat clean. The different yards and stables are carefully fed each day tn the same order, which is important to avoid confusion and mistakes—beginning with No. 1, and so on through the list. After breakfast, water is given, going around twice to see that all are well supplied. The roots are next cut, (ruta-bagas, which I consider best), and of these to my present stock of about 350 sheep, Tam now feeding 10 bushels a day. At eleven o’clock straw is fed. Twelve is the dinner hour, and immediately after dinner the roots are fed. The troughs and tubs are now all examined, and replenished with water if necessary—also salt, salt and ashes, browse, litter, and anything else that may be needed, is supplied. The evening and next morning’s feeds of grain and oil-meal are next prepared, and hay got ready for both night and morning. At 4 P.M. feeding the grain is again commenced, followed as before by hay, after which the water tubs and troughs are emptied and “urned over, and the work is finished for the night.” The value of roots for winter feeding is very inadequately esti- 972 THE SHEPHERD’S MANUAL. mated in the United States, but it may be well questioned if a flock of sheep can be profitably or successfully kept without them. A certain portion of water must be taken with the food every day. The more intimately this is mixed with the food, the better for the digestive process. In feeding 12 lbs. of roots to a sheep 80 to 90 per cent, or 44 to 5 qts. of water are given in them. By the pro- cess of mastication the water is intimately mixed with the solid matter, and a semi-liquid pulp is formed exactly fitted for the ru- minative and digestive processes of the stomach. By cutting or pulping the roots, and sprinkling or mixing the ration of meal, bran, or grain, upon or with them, the whole food reaches the stomach in the most appropriate condition possible. Digestion proceeds uniformly, the stomach does not need to be supplied with a large quantity of water at any time, and its solventjuices are not diluted and weakened. The bowels act regularly, and constipation, one cf the most troublesome disorders of the flock when on dry food, is avoided and prevented. But the daily ration of roots must be apportioned with care and judgment. For lambs 5 to 6 Ibs. daily will be sufficient; for two-year-olds and mature sheep, 10 to 15 lbs. will be anample allowance ; the smaller quan- tity being enough for a Southdown, and the larger for a full grown Cotswold, Leicester, or Lincoln. For a Merino a much less quantity should be apportioned, as this breed cannot produce a fleece of good quality, or great weight, without being supplied with enough oily matter to secrete the large amount of yolk which their fleece contains. Of all the roots usually grown, the sugar-beet is the best for sheep, being the most palatable, and containing the greatest pro- portion of solid nutritious matter. For every 100 sheep to be fed with roots at the rate of ten pounds per head per day, during the feeding season of 5 months, about 4 acres devoted to this crop will be required, yielding about 18 tons, or 550 to 600 bushels per acre. This is a small estimate, and only half the yield of a good ora possible crop, but is near that of our average crops. The amount of food necessary to keep a sheep in good thrifty condition has been determined to be 15 pounds of actually dry substance per week for each 100 lbs. of live weight. As grain and hay contain about 14 per cent of water, this allowance will be equal to about 18 lbs. of hay or grain, or nearly 3 lbs. per day. But as for the perfect digestion of the food, a certain bulk is requisite, the mixed daily ration should be composed of such proportions of bulky. and concentrated food, that 7 to 9 pounds are required to produce an increase of one pound in live weight. From the data previously RAISING LAMBS FOR MARKET. 13) given, it will not be difficult for the intelligent reader and shepherd to arrive at a correct judgment, and conform his plan of feeding to the peculiar circumstances of his flock, and with a view to the greatest profit. EHARLY MARKET LAMBS. There are some special objects in the winter feeding of sheep which require particular methods of management to ensure suc- cess. In regard to feeding store sheep, and when the chief object- is the increase of the flock, and the healthful growth of the fleece, nothing need be said beyond what has been given in the preced- ing pages. But special management is needed for the production of early market lambs, and for the fattening of sheep purchased to ensure profit both in money and manure; in regard to these cases some special explanation may be pertinent. The production of market lambs, if rightly managed, may be made very profitable. This business may be followed on a suitable farm anywhere within 150 miles of a good market. The markets for lambs are found chiefly in the large cities, Washington, New York, Boston, Phila- delphia, Baltimore, and Albany being the chief eastern markets, and St. Louis, Cincinnati, and Chicago, the chief western ones. Some few of the southern cities offer good markets for lambs early in the spring. April, May, and June are the months when the prices are the most remunerative ; after June the prices per pound for lambs are but little more than those for sheep. In April and May, a lamb weighing 40 pounds will often sell for $10. Those farmers who make the raising of early lambs a special business, follow one of two methods. In one case they keep a permanent flock of ewes, selected for their good character as nurses and milkers, quiet in dispositicn, docile, and easily managed, and ready to act as foster mothers to other lambs whose mothers have been sent away. The other plan is to purchase, late in the sum- mer, a flock of ewes, as well selected as may be, from which to raise a crop of spring lambs; the ewes are then shorn, and after- wards fattened and sent to market before the year is complete. Which of these two methods would be the best to adopt depends upon circumstances. The first plan needs for its successful opera- tion a farm suitable for pasturing sheep, or which has at least sufficient suitable summer pasture for the flock. For the second plan little or no pasture is required; a rough field in which the ewes may run while being fed for market, or a run upon the clover sod to be plowed for corn in May, being all that is required. A L V4 THE SHEPHERD'S MANUAL. stock of ruta-bagas, which keep in excellent condition until June, if needed so long, is provided as a substitute for grass while the ewes are being fattened. This latter plan is well suited as an additional industry upon grain or dairy farms, in which some additional capital may be turned over with a prospect of its being returned in less than a year witha gain of 100 per cent in money, besides a valuable addition to the manure heap. The selection of ewes and a ram from which to raise market lambs, is the chief point for consideration, the wool being a sec- ondary object. The form of the sheep and their temperament are the first points to be regarded in their selection; but if the flock is to be kept permanently, it is best to procure sheep which will yield a good fleece as well as a good lamb, as this will add to the profit. Single lambs of good size, are more profitable than twins, which will generally be of smaller growth. It matters little about the breed, as this is not a point with the marketmen, although a black-faced Southdown is most in favor with them, because of its usual plumpness and fatness. A lamb from a grade Merino ewe, and a Southdown or Shropshire ram, is fat at any age, and is soon ripe for market, and will sell better than a larger lamb that is more bony and less plump. A cross from a grade Merino ewe and a Cotswold ram, is the next best lamb, if not altogether as good a one. A large bodied, short-legged, broad backed, native ewe, with some Merino and Southdown blood in her composition, is, perhaps, all things considered, the best sheep that can be chosen foradam. ) 2 Manurial)Value of... ... 80 Hoven, Treatment of.............. 196.| Ophthalmia, Treatment of...,..... 242 * Hurdles, WISCLO Le wee We cies 23; *Oxford-Down Sheep, Description sear yt for Refractory Ewe..... 37 Ofte? Eee ec sarah steno 110 * Hydatids in the Brain............ 226 | Pale Disease of Lambs....... ... 248 Inflammation of the Bladder....... PAS eeaC kim MAC CCC eer eleaae ell atereietelelel= 161 ‘) Bowels).... 2: 199.| Palsy, Treatment of.....:...... .. 218 re chat Soa ESTA TY 208 Are Mitt 216 | Paralysis, Treatment of........ 217-247 ie ie sabi) Se naceeutic 201 | Parasitical IDVIEGHISES > acecopogeocsa! < 219 Influenza, Treatment of.......... -206 | Parsley, Value of in Pastures...... 17 Intestines of the Sheep.... ....... 182 | Parturient Apoplexy and Fever.208-240 Kentucky, Improved, Sheep....... 91 Pasture, Dry, Necessary for Health 14 * Kidney, Structure of the......... 186 Change of, Advantageous. 31 Mactealaviesselsiterncctrrtrctelrice 184 “ Extent Ofsainvthe Wess. 10 Lambing, Diseases Connected wgth.239 ‘| Mxposure ofsule. 5.002 22 Lambs, ‘Castrating Raat ieee terete 39-243, ‘© Grasses Suitable for...... 16 * IDtloy eyes Roo GocoapecodeaD, oO 4§ ‘¢ Management of........... 20 “Diseases Of......----++- 45-245 *¢ Suitable for Sheep........ 12 Ce SD) OC]: Piererrecreretctetryarei 39-243 | Pining, Treatment of.............. 203 i Feeding et aieierarepeis ote saeloetsve 40 Panis Eoin Seem seecce eee 108 fo. Eaxativie LOD js esteccceinete 41 ; Plethora, Treatment of............ 203 ‘° Newly-born, Care of....... 37 | Pleurisy, Treatment of............ 193 2 Raising Early Market...... 73 | Pneumonia, Treatment of.......... 192 HO Nata, Feeding sodsad0.00000 37 | Poisoning, Treatment of........... 198 EO ae Weaning Warseyeiaieial there eyerevave 38 | Pox, Sheep, Treatment of....... .211 bamibis:Condiales yeni jer scrntie.e 46 | Prices of Wool inthe World....... 166 Tamb=Crecpeecercseeeeecccsece os 41 | Production of Wool in the World. .165 * Laurel. Poisoning by............. 198 | Purgatives, Useof............. 189) Leicester, Improvement of Other Ram, Selection of the.............. 43 1efHEo hy Goseneciooooes 84 Rape for Fall and Winter Feeding. 23 * e Description of the.... .103 | Red-water, Treatment of........... 207 * Leicester-Merino, Description of Reproductive Organs, the.......... 187 UIE paponedoGooe qdotud andoce acon. 185 | Respiration, Process of ........... 175 * Lincoln. Description of the...... 100 | Respiratory Organs, Diseases of...190 Linseed- Oil- C: uke- Meal, Valite of... 64 ue Substitute for.. oo (8) Retention of Urine, Treatment of..213 Rheumatism, Treatment of........ 202 * Romney Marsh Sheep, Descrip- 264. THE SHEPHERD’S MANUAL. tioniofathew irc cc te ecikeeeaee mas 104 7ROOL Cmiberme een mace eee eee 26 Bop eae ial eho} eteatonntnedonca emer ce 20 Roots, Cultuneiotees anaes ee 26 (Ojiinunkeanaomendcase sooupeoe 27 Oo ane ahhNe es on dideaesooae Sabot oo Nutritive Value of........ 63 eS Quantity Needed for a Flock 72 # «6 Sloninewny Pitsee eee. 26 Rot, of the Foot, Treatment of... ..236 * ‘* in the Liver, Treatment of..... 222 Rumination, Process Of............ 181 Sait Necessary for Sheep........... 33 Saxon Merino, Description of the. . 130 * Scab, Treatment for..... ........ 232 Sea-Weed Eaten by Sheep......... 19 Scrofula, Treatment of............ 204 Shearing SITY) See Aes oHosonedsoe 158 7ISNeECuOnsbasiireneemeeeeee eee 32 + MraGeonGrantissen scence 53 eS Mrsshaw:ss. seco te ae 54 Sheep, Census of, in U.S.°50,°60,'70.167 ee When a Lamb Becomes a... 45 Shelter, Effect of, on Consumption ahRood staan. eens 67 * Shropshire Sheep, Description of.112 Silesian Merino, Description of the132 * Skeleton of the Sheep........-... 169 * Skin, Structure of the............ 148 Soils Suitable for Pastures......... 12 Sontingy wooly sae ee ee 165 * Soutndown Sheep, Description of114 -Merino, Description Of ithe ewe, ace 135 Spanish Merino, Description of the127 Spleen, Functions of the 185 SDLaine eee eee eee eee eer Lene eAaD Simul ani Ss eWsero tee eee eee eee 190 * Stomach of the Sheep........... 180 @ Foreign Bodies in the..200 Stretches, Treatment of........... 195 Summer Management of Sheep.... 11 * Table for Tying Wool............ . 162 *' Mape=WiOLMS = kaye) eee eels oe 228 Tagging and Trimming Sheep..... 158 * Teeth, Growth of the......... 45-171 * Tick, the SINC Ds coo vodenc. Saniscer 233 MWS}, IDY}a) oles g aon seen sone odes 47 * Trochar and Canula.............. 194 Turnips, Cultivation of............ 24 os Folding Sheep Upon... .. 25 ftom Winters Meeding sis: 24 Urinary Canal, Sediment in the....214 Organs, Functions of the.185 Uterus, Inversion of............... 242 Urine, ‘anal ysis of Ash of.......... 15 Wee AD [NACH Go Goon ones oo50boc 91 * Washin SHECD peek ene 155 Water, Necessity of:.0. 5.227.250. 7. 21 eS Quality,of ee eee ee 21 * Welsh Mouniain Sheep, Descrip- tloncOf HER ak ie eae ee 125 Western Plains, Value of, for eheer Pastures jsccs eee eee 19 Winds, Effects of, on Condition... 22 Winter Management of Sheep...... 49 Womibsinversiontotnesncsceseeeee 242 Wool, Bredkain, eee 21 Classificationvoie..-eeee ee 148 a COMPOSTNON Ole meee reese 156 * “ How te Judge of........ 150-153 £2 OP, WENO hale apenodddoadonsedacs 161 Et | IPTICESIORS nem eer tae nies 149 “ Quality of, a Test of Health 15-150 cu sc SUUeMerinoee secon e 99 Wie sonnet neoddioG dane uoae 165 ce SERUC LUE LOM ee eeeeemeetee 142 “Value of Imports of......... 10 Fo omWiashin slots .cies soars 155 ** World’s Production of...... 165 : Worms, the iBladderieesces-eeeee 224 oo}, (dors) 1BVPNU soo ooomedcs4 226 #8 in the Bronchial Tubes. .223 * e in the Intestines........ 229 * sf in the Lungs............: 223 - Won dss. nb ot Bede eane cere 2A4 Yarrow, Description Of 25845 acer 18 Yolksin, Wiooltse eee eee eerie 99 ‘eComposition of... ... 052... ... 14% 2 The items marked with a * arc illustrated. were: 4 YN ARAN AAR \ - \f = (4 i t ee WN", % } p / ; 3) a en ee {2s}: . fy Mrs } t IPRS Ay tet ; ee A: } Af \ iW fall Es YAP a REN AL ; es | Vx Mane idee Aa y We ae A TAx\| \F WEA IDENAIAG) } tte i . i) VMAS ie ! AEN WR Ys Way » R . y ) 4) Posy 1 3 \ ORS f , ¥ ? “y