What a lot of small and backyard sheep owners do not know - there are laws in the US about how short a tail can be docked. The tail has to be left long enough it completely covers the ewes vulva - thereby protecting her from infection and fly strike. A 2 inch long tail on a ewe is not good.
I have some ewes with tails and some without.
Dairy sheep (friesian) don't have wooly tails so docking them is a preference for a owner who wants to be able to see at a glance what is going on back there from a distance. I don't dock those.
I have found the sooner the better for tail docking. We had some done at 2 weeks - ohhh they bleed! And some done at day 2 after birth - easy and over with. We give ours a small dose of pain reliever at the tail joint just before the back bone. Then it is clamped off and gone easily in a matter of about 30 seconds.
I prefer not to castrate all the males - even if you use them for freezer meat the hormones don't effect anything as long as they under a year old. This year I have far more ram lambs than should be together with my ewes and therefore Thursday is the day they have the deed performed.
I have some ewes with tails and some without.
Dairy sheep (friesian) don't have wooly tails so docking them is a preference for a owner who wants to be able to see at a glance what is going on back there from a distance. I don't dock those.
I have found the sooner the better for tail docking. We had some done at 2 weeks - ohhh they bleed! And some done at day 2 after birth - easy and over with. We give ours a small dose of pain reliever at the tail joint just before the back bone. Then it is clamped off and gone easily in a matter of about 30 seconds.
I prefer not to castrate all the males - even if you use them for freezer meat the hormones don't effect anything as long as they under a year old. This year I have far more ram lambs than should be together with my ewes and therefore Thursday is the day they have the deed performed.