Animal identity
Tag number, sex, breed, birth date, entry date, source, group and status.
Sheep record keeping guide
Good sheep records are not just paperwork. They help you compare animals, plan lambing, control feed costs, review treatments, prepare sales and understand whether the flock is improving.
Core records
Start with the records that support real decisions. Each record should answer a useful question later, not just fill a notebook.
Tag number, sex, breed, birth date, entry date, source, group and status.
Weigh dates, live weight and average daily gain for sale and performance review.
Symptoms, product, dose, reason, withdrawal period, follow-up and outcome.
Feed purchases, stock movement, daily use, unit cost and remaining inventory.
Breeding dates, expected lambing dates, lamb count, parentage and lambing notes.
Sale, slaughter, death or transfer date, weight, price, buyer and exit reason.
Monthly review
The best record system is the one you actually maintain. Review active animals, missing weights, treatment notes, feed stock and sale candidates on a regular rhythm.
Even a short weekly update and a monthly review can reveal problems before they become expensive.
Connected records
HerdDeck is built for the point where notebooks and spreadsheets start to slow the farm down. Animal cards, feed stock, treatments, weights, finance, HARSE ration planning, pedigree and reports stay in one workflow.
Next step
Use simple templates to build the habit. When you need animal history, feed, health, pedigree, costs and reports to work together, HerdDeck Shepherd gives the farm one connected record system.