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AUCTIONS. H.~?.iATSorT AND ca V ARM PRODUCTION VA R M PRODUCTION farm Production F ARM PRODUCTION FARM PRODUCTION ASSISTED BY ASSISTED BY ASSISTED BY THAT INSPIRES THAT INSPIRES THAT INSPIRES /"jUR success is direct evidence of the " EXCELLENT SERVICE AND CLOSE ATTENTION we give to each individual consignment. Our Organisation is appreciated by Canterbury Farmers and Pastoralists, who realise that we always secure the HIGHEST POSSIBLE AVERAGE obtainable. Sand us your next draft, be it FAT SHEEP FAT CATTLE FAT LAMBS FAT PIGS or STORE STOCK. We place at your disposal all facilities for the appropriate handling at Addington. H. MATSON and CO., Woolbrokers, Stock and Station Agents, Christchurch. tExtract from Country Life Stock and Station Journal, Apl. 5, 1930.) DO YOU KNOW THE HEALTH SIGNS OF YOUR SHEEP? THE SURE WAY OF MAKING RIGHT WHAT IS WRONG WITH YOUR PASTURES. f A S a woolgrower, are you really in the business to get the most from it despite market fluctuations over which you have no control whatever: After all, the amount of'wool you eet from your sheep and the price it fetches, are what you deserve by the sheep you keep—no more and no less. Your sheep have got to keep you. because that is the business of woolgrowing. But are they? The improvement of a flock, as all sheep-men know, is a gradual rather than a mushroom-like process, but even when you may have been able to purchase good rams and join them with a fairly even lot of culled ewes, it does not necessarily follow that you are then going to get just the amount of wool and the quality that jou

would like. There arc many woolgrowers in districts where they are now faced with a proposition something like this cither spend some money and spend it wisely in improvement of the flocks and the insurance of feed to tide flocks over lean periods, or get out of the business altogether. j A Block of Lixit Now and Then, ! j Gives Health to Stock, j ' Brings Wealth to Men. I ■| ! In growing wool, every grower aiming at quantity and quality. He .is not satisfied with a good price for the wool if his sheep are small an..! of low-cuttir.g yield. BREEDING v. FEEDING. tlowever well bred a man's sheep may be, breeding is only one side of the question of profitable wool production. The other side is feeding. But what is the use of feeding sheep unless they are healthy and robust constitutioned? If you have a flock of sheep that are up and down in health, according to seasonal conditions, it is time to study what's wrong. With isheep such factors often come very much into prominence. A healthy sheep should eat, drink, and sleep ■well and regularly, and be bright and alert in manner. The posture should be normal and easy, disease being indicated by irregularities such as tired appearance in resting limbs, pendulous ears, or lips, etc. Change of hrrtits cften indicates disease. Various functions must also be norsrial, such as the pulse, respiration, and temperature (both internal and external), and excretions. In sheep the pulse is somewhat variable, but average between 70 and 80 beats per minute. It is easily taken inside the thigh. Sh?ep in health are actively moving over the country, feeding here and jthere, or resting comfortably chewing the cufl. On opening the wool there is a healthy, pinkish appearand of the skin, which is an indication of a thriving, healthy animal. When disturbed, healthy sheep rapidly move together. Defective or sick sheep separate themselves or lag behind the main mob. ' ROAD TO HEALTH. j ! "Keeping sheep in a healthy condition, tyee from the many factors that undermine their vitality, is nowadays a very serious business. A generation or fo ago, there was comparatively little trouble and worry in keeping Xip to competitive condition. But times have changed, and so much of 'the valuable mineral constituents have been taken out of the soil that in many instances replenishing the loss has never been seriously thought of. A generation or so ago the management of a flock was simplicity itself, despite the fact that the size of the flocks was respectively larger, and there was no less time spent on the sheep compared with the sheep to-day. Keeping the sheep in healthy condition these days demands that every grazier should know what to do and ,>hen to do it. i | JfORD'S DRENCH I | Is Popular On Every Farm. | Order your supplies ] from H. MATSON & CO. H. MATSON & CO. Xv

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19350424.2.160.1

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume LXXI, Issue 21456, 24 April 1935, Page 22

Word Count
759

Page 22 Advertisements Column 1 Press, Volume LXXI, Issue 21456, 24 April 1935, Page 22

Page 22 Advertisements Column 1 Press, Volume LXXI, Issue 21456, 24 April 1935, Page 22