Llanwenog
Llanwenog sheep are a Welsh breed named for the Llanwenog area of Ceredigion in west Wales. They were developed from local Welsh sheep with outside influence from Shropshire and other British breeds, producing a medium-sized ewe suited to grassland farms rather than the harshest mountain ground. The breed is easy to recognize by its black face and ears, white woolly topknot, and white fleece. Llanwenogs are best known as a maternal, dual-purpose sheep: ewes are typically milky and prolific, while lambs can be sold finished or used in crossbreeding systems.
Farmers and smallholders keep Llanwenogs for low-input lamb production, heritage grazing, and Welsh breed conservation. They do well on decent pasture with winter forage, and their lambing performance makes body condition management important before tupping and late pregnancy. The dense fleece should be shorn on schedule, and dark skin on the face does not remove the need to watch for flystrike and eye problems in wet seasons. For buyers, the black face with a pale poll is a useful clue, but registered stock and sound udders, feet, and teeth matter more than markings alone.
Colors: Badgerface, Black, Blackbelly, Brown, Gray, Gulmoget, Katmoget, Moorit, Piebald, Red, Silver, Spotted, Tan, White, White with Black Face and Legs, White with Black Points, White with Brown Points