Posts Tagged ‘Primitive Breed’

The Breed Of Resilient Shetland Sheep, Its Wool, Diet And The Variety Of Meals We Can Have

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

Real Shetland sheep are classed as a primitive breed, small in size, and very hardy. They can prosper on low levels of nutrition. They have to be hardy because of Shetland?s extreme weather conditions.

Shetland sheep come in a mixture of colours, some of which are: white, black, moorit, and catmuggit. The coloured ones results in beautiful fleeces, which can decorate your floor or chairs.

The wool is exceptionally fine, very soft and classed as the greatest wool amongst all the British breeds. Shetland is famous for the garments produced from its hardy Shetland sheep.

Shetland sheep graze on the hills, which is generally rough grazing. For the duration of the winter months, they are given extra put out around the end of November, or beginning of December, thus lambing in Shetland tends to be a bit later than other parts of the UK, to ensure (or hope) the weather is warmer around April and May.

Shetland sheep normally are best left wholly alone when lambing. The shepherd will sustain a watchful eye throughout, but the sheep do best left to their natural environment. Problems will be more likely of taking place if there are continuous disturbances.

The Shetland lamb is small, with a dead weight average of approximately eight to ten kilos. Shetland lamb and mutton have a beautiful, sweet taste, which is much better than a bigger cross animal?s meat which has a strong taste/flavour. The leg of lamb is the most favoured of meals, roasted slowly and thoroughly ? no meal is better. The chops are gently boiled, with vegetables added. This provides a healthy, and warming stew, eaten along with boiled potatoes.

Customarily, a ewe was slaughtered, with the meat being cut up and put into coarse salt for the three weeks. It is then taken out of the salt, and hung up to dry. This is ?reestit mutton?. It has an acquired taste, and makes an brilliant pot of potato soup. This way of preserving the meat, ensured a permanent supply of mutton, at an age when there were no freezers. The ?reestit mutton? is as popular today.

None of the parts from the animal were wasted. The sheep?s head, brain and tongue were all cooked. The large stomach part was put into bicarbonate of soda, then paintstakingly cleaned and used to make a pudding. The pudding mix was comparable to a Christmas cake, and the pudding was, and still is, locally known as ?curnie puddin?. The stomach was filled with mix and then sowed up to keep this mix in. The pudding was pricked all over and put into a pot to boil for about two hours. A delightful of a lot of the Shetland sheep?s diet. When taken home from the hills, if they have access, the sheep will naturally head to the beach, where they will feed on seaweed. Seaweed is good for sheep. It is full of all the %LIN2%, minerals, bio-stimulants and amino acids, and all at the natural levels.

Feeding seaweed increases fertility, and gives a better lamb growth. There is a reduction in the loss of lambs to white muscle disease. The sheep achieve a better coverage of wool, they do not shed as much wool, therefore a better wool production. Overall, there is less disease in sheep that have been fed seaweed, or gained access to it themselves. Feeding seaweed to animals returns the priceless nutrients to the land as well as to the animal, thus the cycle of mineral loss is replaced naturally.

22.11.09