Stage your own show to pick top of the flock

MALLEE sheep producers have the opportunity to stage one-day workshops designed to lift the lifetime performance, productivity and value of their Merino ewes.

The workshops embrace the year-round potential of breeders through fleece value, meat value and surplus stock potential.

The Picking Performer Ewes workshop identifies the key practical actions commercial enterprises can implement on-farm to improve the net reproductive rate in a Merino breeding flock.

Australian Wool Innovation national extension manager Emily King told North West Farmer the workshop had been developed to show woolgrowers running commercial self-replacing Merino enterprises how within-flock selection and enhanced management can increase reproductive rates and lead to consistency of production and business performance – year-in, year-out.

“The top performing Merino ewe-based enterprises generate much higher profits than the industry average,” Ms King said.

“There is enormous potential for the average woolgrower to raise their profits to the level of the top producers.

“The new Picking Performer Ewes workshop aims to help woolgrowers do this by identifying the ewes in their flock which are performing and those which aren’t.

“In flocks where little to no selection pressure has been placed on breeding ewes, there is scope to increase the overall net reproductive rate, decrease reproductive wastage, and increase the consistency of production, by simply picking the animals which are producing offspring consistently.

“The new workshop aims to help woolgrowers capitalise on finding and managing the performer ewes which earn you double what the passengers do in their lifetime.

“Performance varies between seasons, as well as districts, but high weaning rates are achievable in all areas, with astute management.”

Participants in the workshop step through sessions relating to the whole reproductive cycle, with a focus on:

• Understanding a ewe’s lifetime performance and economic earnings.

• The difference between ewes that are ‘passengers’ and those that are ‘performers’, and the high cost of retaining passengers.

• The importance of undertaking the three key performance practices of: scanning, condition scoring and wet and drying at marking

• Turning potential into profit by lambing and weaning well.

• Learning strategies for success and mapping it all out in a management calendar.

• The Picking Performer Ewes workshop was piloted in October last year and is now available to growers across the country.

The Picking Performer Ewes workshop complements the AWI-funded Lifetime Ewe Management (LTEM) course, and is ideal as an LTEM refresher but also for those who haven’t completed an LTEM course yet.

To have the workshop run in your region, contact your state AWI extension network, details are available at www.wool.com/networks.

Digital Editions


More News

  • Wine producers call for intervention

    Wine producers call for intervention

    AUSTRALIA’S winegrape producers’ association has warned that the sector is entering a structural crisis as global demand continues to spiral. In their pre-budget submission for 2026-27, Australian Grape and Wine…

  • Vineyard vintage outlook wine-derful

    Vineyard vintage outlook wine-derful

    THIS year’s vintage is shaping up well across the Murray Darling. Duxton Vineyards, operating more than 2400 hectares as well as a large-scale winery, are reportedly on track for a…

  • Honey on tap un-bee-lievably good

    Honey on tap un-bee-lievably good

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532909 WHAT’S better than beer on tap? Honey, especially if it’s made and produced by Megan and Lachie Mannes, from the Mannes Desert Honey…

  • China driving Aussie almond demand

    China driving Aussie almond demand

    DEMAND for Australian almonds remains strong despite easing from last season’s record highs, according to the Almond Board of Australia. The industry’s October sales position report, released in December, shows…

  • Tractor tragedy sparks concern

    Tractor tragedy sparks concern

    A FARMER has become the first workplace fatality for 2026 after being entangled in a tractor wheel, prompting renewed calls for farmers to stay vigilant around machinery. The death comes…

  • Collection under the hammer

    Collection under the hammer

    AN eclectic curation of vintage and antique Australian pastoral machinery and memorabilia will go to auction on 1 February. Yvon Smythe and her late partner, Neil O’Callaghan, began the Manangatang…

  • Mallee groundcover levels hit new low

    Mallee groundcover levels hit new low

    GROWERS in the Northern Mallee are facing some of the worst seasonal conditions on record, experts have warned, with many paddocks left “bare and vulnerable” due to “extremely poor” growing…

  • Old iron, new spark to fire up

    Old iron, new spark to fire up

    HISTORY will be rolling, rattling and roaring into action on the Australia Day long weekend when Quambatook’s paddocks turn back the clock and put vintage muscle back to work. The…

  • Crisis under the microscope

    Crisis under the microscope

    A MAJOR new research push has been launched to investigate labour and skills shortages gripping key farming regions, with the Murray–Darling and Swan Hill firmly in the spotlight. AgriFutures Australia,…

  • Calls flow for royal commission

    Calls flow for royal commission

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 524159 AUSTRALIA needs a royal commission into water management in 2026, according to Murray MP Helen Dalton, who says politicians are “destroying” the nation’s…