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Sheep


Zaman
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To breed and grow lamb can be profitable, however you need a few hundred to be earn a basic living, at this point a few losses are excepted but if you have 10 it’s almost as much work as a 100 and you lose a higher percentage so not viable. The tipping point seems to be about 50 to make the effort vs reward viable on a commercial level but that is as part of a mixed set up

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10 minutes ago, Zaman said:

Can I ask... if sheep are so much work and time consuming and headache to have... then why does everyone have them? 

Might be a can of worms mentioning this, but subsidies. Most of the meat must be going abroad, talking to people I know about this recently, they (me included) don't eat lamb or mutton on a regular basis. But the hills and fields are full of sheep.

Kinda seems like we are subsidising a supply of meat to Europe?

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6 minutes ago, scbk said:

Might be a can of worms mentioning this, but subsidies. Most of the meat must be going abroad, talking to people I know about this recently, they (me included) don't eat lamb or mutton on a regular basis. But the hills and fields are full of sheep.

Kinda seems like we are subsidising a supply of meat to Europe?

I eat lamb fairly regularly. I used to buy a box of hogget from a farmer up north but he stopped doing runs down my way as he was selling out locally. 

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Subsidies, not really worth the paperwork or agro. In generalist terms you'd need to be a hill farmer owning Snowdonia or a big boy arable farmer.

 

Most of us fall in the middle and to be honest isn't worth having you're hands tied behind your back with yet more rules.

 

If I had 100acres it might be feasible, but the stewardship stuff gets in way, unless the newer schemes make it more about common sense environmental stuff we already try to achieve and does zero to reduce costs of production.

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