Flock summary report
A high-level view of active animals, groups, sex distribution, entries, exits and recent changes. This is the first report to open when reviewing the farm.
Sample sheep farm reports
These examples show the kinds of reports a sheep farm should be able to review: flock status, animal history, weights, treatments, feed use, sale results and pedigree information. They are designed for real management decisions, not just record storage.
Report examples
A useful report should answer a farm question quickly: which animals are growing, which animals cost more than expected, what was treated, what was sold and what needs attention next.
A high-level view of active animals, groups, sex distribution, entries, exits and recent changes. This is the first report to open when reviewing the farm.
A single-animal history with identity, group, weights, treatments, lambing notes, exit information and management notes in one place.
Shows weigh dates, live weight change and average daily gain so slow animals, ration issues and sale readiness can be spotted earlier.
Lists treatments, dates, doses, reasons, withdrawal periods and follow-up notes. This helps avoid lost details after the busy work is done.
Connects feed purchases, stock movement and usage history. Feed reports become more valuable when compared with growth and animal cost.
Compares purchase cost, feed cost, treatment cost and exit income. This makes it easier to see which animals or groups actually produced margin.
Breeding and sales
Pedigree reporting is especially important when selling breeding animals. Buyers need confidence that the animal has a clear history and that close genetic conflicts are not hidden inside the flock.
A practical pedigree report should help the farm explain parentage, related animals, breeding notes and sale suitability without manually rebuilding the story from separate sheets.
Good pedigree reporting should make it easier to review family lines, avoid risky pairings, support breeding sales and create cleaner documentation for valuable stock.
See HerdDeck modules →How to use reports
Check active animals, group changes, exits and anything that changed recently.
Look for animals with weak gain, repeated treatment or missing records.
Check whether feed cost, animal cost and expected sale value still make sense.
Decide which animals should be watched, treated, sold, retained or reviewed for breeding.
Connected reporting
HerdDeck Shepherd connects animal history, weights, medical records, feed stock, finance, HARSE ration planning and pedigree reporting across Android and Windows.