Pasture Perfect Locker Lamb
What is pasture raised lamb?

In our case, we raise our sheep with grass as their primary source of nutrition during the
natural growing cycle of our northwestern pastures.  In this photo, you can see that we are
strip grazing the orchard pasture.  This means that the sheep are rotated through
movable paddocks every 2 to 3 days.  This makes them eat all of the grass in that
paddock (rather than just the tastiest ones) and it allows the grass in other parts of the
pasture to rest and regenerate.  As the sheep move from paddock to paddock, they
spread their own manure which acts as a fertilizer and adds to the organic matter of the
soil.
Why is grass better for sheep?

Sheep are ruminants.  This means that they have special bacteria in their rumen that digest the
cellulose of grass, allowing the sheep to benefit from the plants' nutrients.  When sheep are fed grain,
they typically gain weight and grow faster than on grass.  

So you might think that in the days of cheap grain (which are rapidly disappearing with the promotion of
ethanol) that it would make sense to grow sheep on grain.  However feeding grain changes the pH of the
sheep's rumen, making it more difficult for the animal to get nutrients from its natural food, grass.  Grain
feeding also comes with its own problems, such as potential fatal bacterial imbalances in the digestive
tract (overeating disease or clostridial infection) and urinary calculi in rams.
Why is pasture raised lamb better for people?

When lambs eat pasture, their fat contains Omega 3 fatty acids.  These are considered "healthy"
fats that are easily metabolized.  When lambs eat a lot of grain, their fat contains Omega 6 fatty
acids.  These are the fats that clog your arteries and are associated with heart disease.

Lambs grown out on pasture are leaner lambs.  They are put through a pasture rotation system
that requires less fertilizer because the animals do the fertilizing themselves.  Pasture rotation
allows paddocks to rest for over 14 days, breaking the life cycle of many internal parasites,
requiring less use of synthetic wormers.  In fact, our sheep are only wormed twice a year, once
prior to breeding and right after lambing.  Less use of medication and wormers, means that the
bacteria and parasites don't have a chance to become resistant.

Synthetic fertilizers are derived from petroleum products (which is why they have become
increasingly expensive.)  When a farmer adds ammonium sulfate to his pasture in the spring, it
helps the grass to grow.  However it also acidifies the soil, requiring additional applications of lime
over time to adjust the pH of the soil back to ideal pasture growing requirements.  Manure is
nature's natural fertilizer.  Manure does not acidify the soil and contributes to the soil by adding
organic matter.  Over time, we will be moving away from synthetic fertilizers in our on-going attempt
to be good stewards to the land and good neighbors while at the same time producing a delicious
and healthy product.
Interested in pasture raised lamb?  

Please e-mail or call (503)662-4249 to reserve yours today.  We sell by the half or the whole and
offer free delivery to your house.  We also ship via 2 day express delivery.  The price is $135 for half
a lamb (approximately 20 lbs. of meat) or $270 for a whole lamb (approximately 40 lbs. of meat.)  
Click below to learn more about the cuts, required freezer space and shipping costs.

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