University of Wyoming

06/08/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 06/08/2024 16:13

Wyoming Wool Initiative Launches Third Annual Lamb a Year Program

Wyoming sheep producer Ivan Laird drops off donated lambs for the 2023-24 Lamb-a-Year program. Back to front are UW graduate student Aaron Kersh, UW sheep specialist Whit Stewart, Laird and UW graduate student Dylan Laverell. (Wyoming Wool Initiative Photo)

The Wyoming Wool Initiative, in partnership with the University of Wyoming College of Agriculture, Life Sciences and Natural Resources, is now accepting donations to support its 2024-25 Lamb-a-Year program.

This flagship program, now in its third year, offers UW students valuable industry experience and provides regional sheep producers with individualized lamb quality data.

"Lamb-a-Year is a value discovery program where producers donate lambs, we feed out those lambs here at the Laramie Research and Extension Center, collect performance and meat quality information, and give that information back to producers," says Whit Stewart, UW Extension sheep specialist. "Lamb-a-Year is an investment in the sheep industry in the state of Wyoming."

Participating producers are asked to donate feeder lambs of 70-90 pounds to be picked up by the Wyoming Wool Initiative in the fall. To receive meaningful results, donors are encouraged to enter at least two lambs into the test, which begins in mid-October and runs through February 2025.

Last year, 25 producers donated a total of 107 lambs to the program.

"Some producers have shared data from Lamb-a-Year with potential buyers as a means of marketing the genetic potential of their lambs," Stewart says. "Others have used the lamb quality information to better understand the optimal finishing weight of their lambs."

Lamb sales help support educational programming for students and producers, workshops at the annual Wyoming Sheep and Wool Festival, meat science curriculum, lamb quality research and more. Producers receive tax-deductible charitable gift receipts based on the market value of their lambs.

A total of more than 160 youth and university students from UW and other institutions benefited from educational opportunities related to the 2023-24 Lamb-a-Year program, the Wyoming Wool Initiative reports.

"Lamb-a-Year funds enhance our ability to deliver curriculum in a unique way," Stewart says. "I think that's when we're doing things right when we're getting students out of the classroom."

To learn more about the Lamb-a-Year program and its impact on students, go here.

To donate lambs, go here and fill out the online form by Sept. 30.

The Wyoming Wool Initiative will coordinate with donors to arrange drop-off and pickup locations this fall, with all lambs delivered to the Laramie Research and Extension Center by Oct. 9.

For more information, email Stewart at [email protected].

The Wyoming Wool Initiative also accepts cash and in-kind donations, such as feed, to support the Lamb-a-Year program. To donate, go here.