Tups loosed with the ewes on the in-bye (valley bottom land) in
late November.
Around Christmas ewes returned to the fell, where they stay probably
without additional feed until April.
April-May: ewes lamb on the inbye. Ewes with single lambs put to
the fell in May. Ewes with twin lambs kept on the inbye
until after clipping
time.
July- August: all sheep clipped, starting with the geld sheep :
i.e. sheep without lambs.
September: lambs weaned from their mothers. Ewes returned to the
fell if they remain fit for the purpose where they wait
for tup time to come
again. If they are too old to return to the fell they
are either retained on the low ground of the farm for
further breeding with a crossing tup
(often a Texel, Suffolk or perhaps a Cheviot) or they
are sold as draft ewes to lowland farmers for the same
purpose.
October: wether (castrated male) lambs are either sold ‘store’ to
lowland farmers to fatten or are sometimes fed on their
own farms to fatten sometime before their first birthday.
November: gimmer (ewe) lambs -the female breeding stock of the
future- are sent away to winter on lowland farms. They
return to their home farms
and are put to the fell in the spring to find the ‘heaf’ where
they suckled their mothers as lambs and where they are
now ‘heafed’ and
will in turn rear their own lambs.