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New tactics boost lamb survival at Lake Bolac

Sheep Central October 7, 2020

Livestock manager Matt Charles trialled temporary fencing after attending an MLA-supported Producer Demonstration Site field day. Image – Steve Cotton.

LAMB survival rates at the western Victorian mixed livestock and cropping property ‘Wirrinourt’, Lake Bolac, have been significantly improved by new management strategies.

Installing temporary fences before lambing is one of the changes livestock manager Matt Charles and owners Rowly and Nick Paterson introduced to the business after attending an MLA Producer Demonstration Site (PDS) field day.

“We’re constantly going to field days like the temporary fencing one, and if we find something valuable, we’ll try to implement it into our operation,” Matt said.

Key lessons learned at the field day

Key lesson learned at the field day included to split lambing mobs as small as your infrastructure, time and finances will allow.

The participants also learned to erect temporary fences prior to lambing to ensure ewes are familiar with the infrastructure, and not to forget to consider land types.

The field day goers also learned that there is more to boosting lamb survival than installing temporary fencing. They should also ensure their other management practices also foster improved reproductive performance.

Smaller mobs, smaller paddocks

Before introducing temporary fencing, Wirrinourt ran big lambing mobs, with as many as 300 twin-bearing ewes lambing on a 35ha paddock.

“Now, most of our twinners won’t lamb on a block bigger than 10ha, and we have a maximum of 10 ewes to the hectare on those blocks,” Matt said.

“Adding temporary fences and splitting up our mobs at lambing time has massively increased survival rates, with nearly a 20 percent improvement in the mobs we split over the first two years.”

Matt said splitting up lambing mobs has also delivered other benefits.

“Using temporary fences and moving to a split joining has meant we can target the better paddocks twice over a year and intensify grazing of those smaller areas.

“Where the fences have worked really well, we’ve followed up and added permanent fencing in those areas,” he said.

Factor in the impact of land types

Matt said while temporary fencing has been successful, it’s been a learning curve and they’ve adapted accordingly.

“We’ve learnt since starting that you’ve got to fence according to your land types.

“If you have an undulating paddock or one with a hill in it and you halve that, all your sheep will just sit on the high ground and you’ll end up with an uneven grazing, so fence the high and low ground separately,” he said.

Take the time to train your sheep

According to Matt, it’s also important to train your sheep onto the fences so they’re familiar with the infrastructure.

“The first year we started doing this we had all the sheep in the paddock, then came in and split them just before lambing.

“They showed it no respect at all, walking straight through the fence across the whole paddock as they were doing the two weeks before the fence was up,” he said.

“Get them used to the fences for a few weeks before lambing first. Once they’ve lambed, keep checking your fences are running to avoid lambs chewing the wires.”

There is more to it than just fencing

As well as adding temporary fences, Matt has introduced other practices which have improved lamb survival rates, including containment feeding over summer.

“The containment pens have helped us stay on the ball with our ewe nutrition from pre-joining right through their pregnancies,” Matt said.

As a result, pastures are in better shape for lambing and the ability to monitor and manage ewe condition score for joining has contributed to increased scanning percentages.

Source: MLA.

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