Manx Loaghtan
Manx Loaghtan sheep are a primitive northern short-tailed breed from the Isle of Man. Their name refers to the characteristic loaghtan brown fleece, which is born dark and often lightens to warm brown or grey-brown with age. The breed is small, alert, and slow maturing compared with modern terminal sire breeds. Many animals are polycerate, commonly carrying four horns, and some have two or more than four. It is kept as a heritage sheep for conservation grazing, lean meat, hand-spinning wool, and preservation of Manx livestock history.
These sheep suit low-input grazing where fencing is sound and handling facilities account for horns. Horn growth should be checked regularly, especially on rams, because tight or uneven horns can press into the face. Their fleece is useful for natural-colored yarn but is not a high-volume commercial clip, so small-flock markets often matter. Manx Loaghtans are generally thrifty, yet lambing supervision, mineral balance, and parasite monitoring are still needed, particularly outside island or upland conditions. Conservation breeders pay close attention to registered stock and ram rotation because the breed's distinct type depends on a relatively small gene pool.
Colors: Badgerface, Black, Blackbelly, Brown, Brown Varying From Light to Dark, Gray, Gulmoget, Katmoget, Moorit, Piebald, Red, Silver, Spotted, Tan, White, White with Black Points, White with Brown Points