Wensleydale Sheep
As their name suggests Wensleydale sheep originate in North Yorkshire, they are a 19th century breed resulting from the crossing of a now extinct Teeswater sheep with an English Leicester ram.
As their name suggests Wensleydale sheep originate in North Yorkshire, they are a 19th century breed resulting from the crossing of a now extinct Teeswater sheep with an English Leicester ram.
Ryelands are a truly old English breed and have been tracked back over 700 years to the monks of Leominster in Herefordshire.
Grey Faced Dartmoors (Darties) are descended from sheep used to graze Dartmoor and are good at surviving harsh condition and poor grazing.
Sometimes known as the Plum Pudding Pig or Oxford Forest Pig, Oxford Sandy and Blacks (OSB) are one of the UK’s heritage breeds of pig.
Highlanders are known to have been grazing the hills and moorlands of Scotland since the 6th century; they are thought to have been the result of crossbreeding between 2 ancient Asiatic breeds which migrated from Mongolia and the Far East.