Sheep Shearing New Zealand Pictures, Images and Stock Photos
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Sheep shearing is the process by which the woollen fleece of a sheep is cut off. The person who removes the sheep's wool is called a shearer. Typically each adult sheep is shorn once each year (a sheep may be said to have been "shorn" or "sheared", depending upon dialect).
Herd of wooly wet sheep looking towards the viewer. Focus on one sheep.
a old style shearing work
A little girl play with a lamb in a sheep farm.
flock of sheared sheep grazing in autumn vineyard
Wool shorn from sheep in shearing bale
A mob of sheep squeeze together in a farmer's shearing shed in New Zealand after mustering.
flock of sheared sheep grazing in autumn vineyard with mountains in background
A flock of fully fleeced sheep moves through pens toward the shearing pen.
sheep for shearing
With over 26 million sheep in New Zealand, there are many more sheep than people. This image has three curious lambs from a flock of sheep next to State Highway 8 in the South Island.
Sheep in shearing pen
A New Zealand Strongeye dog herding freshly sheared sheep.
Two sheep, one has been shaved and the other hasn't.
A man is performing wool shearing for tourists in Mount Nicholas Farm, Queenstown, New Zealand.
Sheep with full fleece of wool ready for summer shearing, New Zealand
Old wool shearing shed
Herd of Sheep in the rain, New Zealand. The wooly wet sheep are in a sheepfold looking towards the viewer.
Sheep, woolly before shearing, on green grass in New Zealand's Otago Peninsula
Merino wool in woman's hand(vertical)
Continuing farmstock...
A flock of sheep in farmland
A Sheep Shearing Demonstration at the yearly Ngatamoti Festival, a New Zealand Country Fair fundraising for the local community in the Tasman District of New Zealand's South Island.
Sheep in New Zealand on there way to the shearing shed
Sheep shearing is the process by which the woollen fleece of a sheep is cut off. The person who removes the sheep's wool is called a shearer. Typically each adult sheep is shorn once each year (a sheep may be said to have been "shorn" or "sheared", depending upon dialect). is the process by which the woollen fleece of a sheep is cut off. The person who removes the sheep's wool is called a shearer. Typically each adult sheep is shorn once each year (a sheep may be said to have been "shorn" or "sheared", depending upon dialect).
Two sheep, one has been shaved and the other hasn't.
Nowadays for shearing alpacas and llamas shearers mostly use shearing mashines , but some shearers practice blade shearing which is less disturbing for animals and gives more accurate result. On South Island of New Zealand only few shearers shear alpacas with blades.
Sheep farming played a huge part in the development of the New Zealand economy. Around 220,000 tonnes of wool is shorn from New Zealand sheep each year.
Sheep with full fleece of wool ready for summer shearing, New Zealand
Sheep during shearing in Oamaru, New Zealand. Farm produce Merinos Wool.
Sheep graze on pasture on the cliff, Otago, New Zealand
Sheep during shearing in Oamaru, New Zealand. Farm produce Merinos Wool.
old jug in a wool shearing shed
Sheep during shearing in Oamaru, New Zealand. Farm produce Merinos Wool.
Sheep during shearing in Oamaru, New Zealand. Farm produce Merinos Wool.
flock of sheared sheep grazing in vineyard in autumn
Sheep during shearing in Oamaru, New Zealand. Farm produce Merinos Wool.
Man hand a sheep food in a Got farm.
A flock of sheep in farmland
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