to make jumpers and stuff
Sheep grow wool not fur and they are born with it. The wool grows as they get older and farmers shear them once a year for the wool.
They Use them For Wool and meat.
no
Wool comes from sheep, the farmers shave it off and weave it together.
They use it to make wool clothes and other things out of wool.
What you do is have the sheers in your hand then go to a sheep and hold down until you get wool from the sheep you should get about three blocks of wool. I'm pretty sure that the wool will grow back in the sheep
Yes, farmers can obtain wool from sheep through a process called shearing, which involves cutting the fleece off the sheep once a year. This practice is essential for the sheep's health and comfort, as it prevents overheating and promotes cleanliness. The collected wool is then processed and sold for various uses, including textiles and clothing. Farmers may raise specific breeds of sheep that are known for producing high-quality wool.
It is shorn (cut) from the sheep.
Farmers in South West England have a breed of sheep that loose their wool automatically in the spring, this breed is called the Exlana.
Then cut off from sheep then take it to the factories
When breeding a sheep that is producing a high amount of wool most farmers will shear the hind end of the ewe (called crutching), just enough for the vulva opening to be easily accessed. Sheep are shorn annually, so it depends of the time of joining and shearing as to how much wool the sheep will actually have in that area. Also farmers are breeding sheep to have less wool in the breech area so that there is a lower risk of fly strike.
Sheep grow wool not fur and they are born with it - it grows with age/time, farmers harvest it (as in shear the sheep) annually.