South African Meat Merino
The South African Meat Merino, widely shortened to SAMM and also known in Afrikaans as the SA Vleismerino in some contexts, is a dual-purpose sheep developed in South Africa from German Merino-type stock. Selection emphasized a plainer-bodied Merino that could raise fast-growing lambs while still cutting a useful white fleece. Compared with fine-wool Merinos selected mainly for fiber, SAMM sheep are broader, deeper, and more meat-oriented, but they remain a wool-bearing breed rather than a hair sheep. They are used as both maternal and sire-line animals depending on the flock system.
Commercial producers value the breed where lamb growth, ewe fertility, and wool income all need to fit one grazing enterprise. It has been exported to countries such as Australia and is often compared with other meat Merino and dual-purpose Merino strains, so performance records are more useful than names alone. Ewes need enough feed to rear market lambs, and fleece management still requires shearing, wool classing, and attention to flystrike risk in suitable climates. Buyers should look at lambing percentage, growth, wool quality, structural soundness, and local adaptation before choosing rams or replacement ewes.
Colors: Badgerface, Black, Blackbelly, Brown, Gray, Gulmoget, Katmoget, Moorit, Piebald, Red, Silver, Spotted, Tan, White, White with Black Points, White with Brown Points