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Sandy Baker- Anderson cuddles her favourite larnb so far this year. The Hoadley area farmer raises Katahdin sheep on her Hoadley area farm. For more, please see Pages 6 to 10 in our special Agriculture Week supple- Enough to make a sheep shearer c ry " Baa, baa, black sheep, have you any wool?" " No sir, no sir, and 1 never will." A little poetic license was necessary to make ( he preceding poem work, since mine of the sheep on Sandy Baker- Anderson's farm are black. But they don't have any wool and never will. They are Katahdin sheep, a 20th century breed that combines mild flavoured meat with low maintenance. Mrs. Baker- Anderson is busy bottle-feeding a pair of lambs that were two of four born to the same ewe; another Katahdin characteristic is a tendency toward multiple births. Her flock is growing exponentially now, with a pair of rams servicing two different groups of ewes. She will keep all the females and sell the male lambs, popular because their meal even appeals to people who don't enjoy lamb. The lean, mild meat doesn't have the characteristic tallow flavour of other breeds. Mrs. Baker- Anderson believes that the fact that the sheep have hair, rather than wool and therefore lack lanolin, is the reason the meat's flavour is so mild. The first Katahdins are the product of a breeding program that' started in Maine in the 1950s. Michael Piel imported some haired sheep from the Caribbean and started cross breeding, looking for the characteristic that would yield the best meat animals. Twenty years after he started, he named his flock " Katahdin", after Mi. Katahdin near his home in Maine. The heavily muscled, medium sized sheep are easy 1am-bcrs and adapt well to varied geography and climate. They are also easy to handle with a docile disposition. There's also no such thing as Katahdin ' mutton', the name given mature meal from sheep past the lamb stage Many travellers who experience mutton in parts of the world where it is popular fare, lose their appetite for lamb altogether. Those people are the perfect market for the mild meal that's often described as being like beef or veal. The Katahdins grow a thick hair coat thai keeps them warm all winter and then they shed it completely in the spring. They look like freshly sheared sheep all summer, until ihcy start their winter coal again. They also needn't have docked tails, since they stay clean without a thick matt of wool. That also means ihey have foot- long tails to bai off pesky flies all summer. Sandy's sheep pen is alive i with baby lambs Jumping and twitching as only a spring lamb \ can and another pen houses ; group of ewes that will be j lambing at the end of April. Tlie ; breed has a five monih gestation period and cycle year- | round. They also breed young, at around seven months. Katahdins have a productive life of seven to eight years and some have known to still be lambing at 12. While the females will add to the Baker- Anderson herd, she'll soon have males ready for purchase. Two of the lambs are already spoken for by an acreage owner, looking for a low maintenance lawn mower.
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Pine Lake History - 1990-1999 |
Subject | AWI: Pine Lake Branch |
Description | Branch History |
Language | en |
Format | application/pdf |
Type | text |
Source | Alberta Women's Institutes |
Identifier | awi0811091 |
Date | 2007 |
Collection | Alberta Women's Institutes - Collective Memory |
Repository | AU Digital Library |
Copyright | For Private Study and Research Use Only |
Description
Title | Page 126 |
Format | application/pdf |
Source | AWI Collection |
Collection | Alberta Women's Institutes - Collective Memory |
Repository | AU Digital Library |
Copyright | For Private Study and Research Use Only |
Transcript | Sandy Baker- Anderson cuddles her favourite larnb so far this year. The Hoadley area farmer raises Katahdin sheep on her Hoadley area farm. For more, please see Pages 6 to 10 in our special Agriculture Week supple- Enough to make a sheep shearer c ry " Baa, baa, black sheep, have you any wool?" " No sir, no sir, and 1 never will." A little poetic license was necessary to make ( he preceding poem work, since mine of the sheep on Sandy Baker- Anderson's farm are black. But they don't have any wool and never will. They are Katahdin sheep, a 20th century breed that combines mild flavoured meat with low maintenance. Mrs. Baker- Anderson is busy bottle-feeding a pair of lambs that were two of four born to the same ewe; another Katahdin characteristic is a tendency toward multiple births. Her flock is growing exponentially now, with a pair of rams servicing two different groups of ewes. She will keep all the females and sell the male lambs, popular because their meal even appeals to people who don't enjoy lamb. The lean, mild meat doesn't have the characteristic tallow flavour of other breeds. Mrs. Baker- Anderson believes that the fact that the sheep have hair, rather than wool and therefore lack lanolin, is the reason the meat's flavour is so mild. The first Katahdins are the product of a breeding program that' started in Maine in the 1950s. Michael Piel imported some haired sheep from the Caribbean and started cross breeding, looking for the characteristic that would yield the best meat animals. Twenty years after he started, he named his flock " Katahdin", after Mi. Katahdin near his home in Maine. The heavily muscled, medium sized sheep are easy 1am-bcrs and adapt well to varied geography and climate. They are also easy to handle with a docile disposition. There's also no such thing as Katahdin ' mutton', the name given mature meal from sheep past the lamb stage Many travellers who experience mutton in parts of the world where it is popular fare, lose their appetite for lamb altogether. Those people are the perfect market for the mild meal that's often described as being like beef or veal. The Katahdins grow a thick hair coat thai keeps them warm all winter and then they shed it completely in the spring. They look like freshly sheared sheep all summer, until ihcy start their winter coal again. They also needn't have docked tails, since they stay clean without a thick matt of wool. That also means ihey have foot- long tails to bai off pesky flies all summer. Sandy's sheep pen is alive i with baby lambs Jumping and twitching as only a spring lamb \ can and another pen houses ; group of ewes that will be j lambing at the end of April. Tlie ; breed has a five monih gestation period and cycle year- | round. They also breed young, at around seven months. Katahdins have a productive life of seven to eight years and some have known to still be lambing at 12. While the females will add to the Baker- Anderson herd, she'll soon have males ready for purchase. Two of the lambs are already spoken for by an acreage owner, looking for a low maintenance lawn mower. |
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