At an Oregon farm, twin lambs say hello to a late sibling
OREGON CITY — Fern Russell was fetching water and feed for her sheep when she heard an odd noise from a pen on the lower side of the barn. That’s where she was keeping two ewes, each with twins.
Lambing season is a busy time, and Russell had checked on the ewes and their twins just 45 minutes earlier, but she thought she’d better take another look. She saw one of the ewes — Julie is her name — murmuring to and licking a lamb lying in a corner of the pen. But wait; four lambs and the other ewe were right there too.
“There’s five lambs here now,” Russell thought to herself. “How can that be?”
Julie didn’t seem mystified by the new lamb’s appearance. Twelve days after her twins were born, she apparently had another baby.
“She was talking to it, making little noises,” Russell said. “She claimed it. It was hers.”
Russell walked up to the house and told her husband, Richard Rea, that he wasn’t going to believe what had happened. Being a husband, he asked her what she’d done now.
“It’s not what I did,” Russell responded. “It’s what a ewe did.”
“Well,” he asked, “What did a ewe do?”
Something rare, apparently. People of course suggested the new lamb belongs to another ewe, but Russell said the pen was secure. “Nobody could have gotten in there,” she said.
Others concluded the newcomer is a late triplet, but Russell said a veterinarian disagreed. The vet said Julie must have ovulated twice while Russell had a buck, a registered Suffolk named Junior, mingling with the ladies of the flock. The vet said the double pregnancy was very rare.
Russell and her husband live on 23 acres outside Oregon City and raise a small flock for wool and meat. They’re both retired from the former Omark Industries, a chainsaw manufacturer, and raise sheep as a side business.
The property was a dairy when her parents bought it in 1948, and they turned it into a beef cattle operation. Russell’s interest in sheep began when someone gave her a wether when she was in grade school.
At this point, Julie and her three lambs appear quite healthy, Russell said. The new one is noticeably smaller than the twins, most likely because it’s 12 days younger.
Russell said her ewes are good producers, with twins common. Two of her ewes in previous years had quads — four lambs — so Russell is keeping an eye out as lambing continues. She had 27 ewes due to give birth this season.
“This multiple birth thing is in our sheep,” she said.
But twins followed by a single is something new for a ewe to do.