Pagliarola
Pagliarola refers to an Italian sheep landrace, generally associated with parts of the central and southern Apennines rather than with a single modern commercial flock book. The name is linked to paglia, or straw, and has been used for sheep with pale, straw-toned fleece or a rustic local appearance. Animals are typically described as medium or small framed, hardy, and suited to mixed hill farming. Like many old Italian sheep, the Pagliarola was kept for several products at once: lamb, some milk for household cheese, manure for fields, and a coarse fleece of limited modern value.
Because documentation is thin and local names overlap, practical interest in Pagliarola sheep is often tied to rural heritage and genetic conservation. Remaining flocks, where identified, are best managed under the low-input grazing conditions that shaped them, with attention to lamb survival, udder soundness, and resistance to rough weather. Breeding programs should confirm animals through local knowledge and records before labeling them, since crossbred hill sheep may look similar. For small farms, the breed is better understood as a regional conservation resource than as a predictable high-output dairy or meat breed.
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