Masham
Masham is a northern English sheep type produced by crossing a Teeswater ram with Dalesbred or Swaledale ewes. It is often treated as a breed in practical conversation, but its strength comes from a repeatable upland-to-lowland cross rather than from a single closed foundation. That pairing produces a white-faced ewe with more size, milk, and fleece than her hill-breed dam while retaining useful hardiness.
Farmers have long valued Masham ewes as commercial mothers for producing lambs from terminal sires on better pasture. Their records should preserve the hill dam line and Teeswater sire influence, because those details explain the animal's purpose. The wool can be attractive and the ewe productive, but the Masham is not meant to be judged like a purely ornamental longwool. It belongs in systems that need a durable maternal ewe able to bridge rough country origins and more productive lamb-finishing ground.
Colors: Badgerface, Black, Blackbelly, Broken, Brown, Gray, Grey, Gulmoget, Katmoget, Moorit, Piebald, Red, Roan, Silver, Solid, Spotted, Tan, White, White with Black Points, White with Brown Points