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How does a farmer recognise his/her own sheep if they share a fell with another farmers sheep?

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How does a farmer recognise his/her own sheep if they share a fell with another farmers sheep?

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Even though most hill-farmers know each individual ewe, (just as we would recognise different people), each sheep has a series of marks to identify the farm to which it belongs. The most obvious of these marks is a colour on the fleece of the sheep. It might be a spot on the back, a stripe on the left shoulder, a letter T on the side, or a combination of all three. The permutations are endless, and every 5 years, a book called “The Shepherd’s Guide” is published, listing every mark from every hill farm in the UK. Because farms have access to more than one fell or have been amalgamated into bigger units over the years, some farms have more than one mark. In addition to this, and mainly because sheep are sheared annually or can shed their fleeces naturally, the farmer also burns his initials into the horn of young female sheep. Some farmers also clip a small piece of skin from a particular part of the sheep’s ear. More recently, coloured plastic tags, showing the name of the farmer with

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