No the wool is skirted and sorted into different bales depending on its cleanliness and quality (micron).
Once a year, in the spring, a shearer uses hand shears (similar to large scissors) or electric shears (similar to an electric razor) to cut the wool off the sheep. The sheep don't mind the process, and as soon as the weather warms up they're really glad to be rid of all that wool!
When sheep have been shorn, the wool is washed (or scoured as they call it in the trade) in warm water. This removes the lanolin (which becomes a commercial product), and dust, faeces, etc. The wool is then carded through an ingenious combing process to remove grass, twigs etc.
The wool will remain on the animal until it is shorn off, the majority of sheep do not naturally shed their wool. Their are some breeds of sheep that do shed their fleece - Dorpers, Damaras etc but these sheep are bred for their meat qualities.
Wool, But there is one breed that has hair
The workhouse of a sheep station is typically referred to as a shearing shed. This is where the sheep are brought to have their wool shorn off by shearers. It plays a vital role in the wool production process on a sheep station.
No when a sheep is shorn its fleece is sorted into different sections depending on its cleanliness and micron.
The sheep were shorn for their wool.
A fleece is what the wool is called when it is shorn from a sheep.
Sheep grow wool and when it is shorn from the sheep it is called a fleece.
Sheep grow wool. When the wool is shorn from a sheep it is called a fleece.
The wool once it has been shorn from the sheep
The wool once it has been shorn from the sheep.
wool, once it is shorn from a sheep it is called a fleece
Wool originates on animals that grow fleece.
Wool that has just been shorn is still wool
It is shorn (cut) from the sheep.
Collective nouns for wool are a bale of wool or a skein of wool.