Spring has been and gone - wet and warm mostly so lots of grass. The sheep were in the driveway paddock last week.
As you can see the grass is well up round their bellies - not that they seem to mind.
They had it mowed and any low hanging branches on the trees trimmed within a day.
Then my four legged gardeners were off to tame the next paddock before shearing begins.
I'm sharing with
Great photos of the sheep in the paddocks. NZ is so beautifully green! A very welcome change to the drought conditions around here right now.
ReplyDeleteWhat delightful shots.
ReplyDeleteThose sheep in deep green grass make a beautiful picture.
ReplyDeleteSeems all so fresh!
That looks so lush and marvelous! It's dry as can be here and I'm longing for good rains and green hills. :-)
ReplyDeleteI love your beautiful sheep photos, how nice to have the four-legged mowers. Thanks for sharing, have a happy day!
ReplyDeleteOh how pleasing to the eye!!! Your images are so wonderful. The sheep in the meadow grasses...lovely.
ReplyDeleteLove the sheep in the deep grass up to their bellies! They must have thought it was a paradise.
ReplyDeleteWonderful to see such good grass. our paddocks are all dried of and feed is getting sparse.
ReplyDeletewhat a lovely place for the sheep to graze
ReplyDeleteThat is beautiful. I like how green everything is.
ReplyDeleteLove your pasture pics!
ReplyDeleteIt looks so warm there :)
We are feeding hay and it is so cold!!
I love your woodie law mowers! And how lucky they are to have such lush pastures.
ReplyDeleteOh, beautiful greenery! Cute non mechanized lawnmowers!
ReplyDeleteCharming photos. You four-legged gardeners look so adorable. They have huge appetite for sure. I'd love to see photos of them during and after shearig:)
ReplyDeleteI love these shots, the grass so green and the sheep, love seeing these.
ReplyDeleteI love how green and not snowy everything is. It is amazing how much they can eat and so much better for the environment than a lawn mower....Michelle
ReplyDeleteIt's definitely summertime! I love your sheep shots--their faces are so expressive.
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