I do not classify them as a meat breed. I would much sooner have texel or southdown. Bucthers look for well conditioned loins and leg of lamb. It's pointless to feed a suffolk for market, because all your feed is going toward the portion of the leg that isn't eaten. (the black part closer to the hoof) Go to the RAWF (royal winter agricultural fair) and go to Market Lamb Sale and compare pictures of a southdown to a suffolk. Much more meat on a southdown.
Suffolk Sheep are a large meat breed sheep but are sometimes bred for the wool.
Suffolk Sheep are a large meat breed sheep but are sometimes bred for the wool.
NO U SUX MEINE BEINEN Sheep originated from Ecuador, and were teleported to England.
Mutton is word used to describe an old sheep (or the meat from an old sheep). A lamb is a young sheep. Therefore, you will never find mutton on a lamb.
Yes if they are stud animals they are shown otherwise they are used for their wool and meat.
it come from the west, the west of the french alpes following it's close friend the suffolk goat, to suffolk, the lovly countryside of suffolk... now the sheep and goat live together in a friendly neberhood following the suffolk cow and suffolk pig.
sheep
suffolk or suffolk cross
A suffolk cross is as the name implys, a sheep that has a suffolk as one of its parents. The one parent is a purebred suffolk and the other parent can be anything. It could be a purebred of another breed or a mix.
Suffolk sheep eat what most sheep breeds eat. They eat pasture plants that are in their area. These consist of clovers, grass, and forbs.
in 1886
Maybe, as sometimes they can roll in mud making them all muddy and black, but there aren't genetically