DORPER HISTORY
The
Dorper breed was developed out of necessity. During the early 1930's,
South African farmers exported a surplus of mutton and lamb, from the fat
tailed indigenous breeds, to London's prestigious Smithfield Market. The
carcasses were rejected because the European consumers were accustomed to
the high quality New Zealand Canterbury lamb.
The South African Meat Board took
on the challenge of producing a meat sheep breed that would produce a
higher quality carcass and yet, thrive under arid to semi-arid conditions.
A breeding project was finalized in 1946 and the Dorper earned a prominent
place in the history of South African agriculture. In 1950, the South
African Dorper Breeders' Association was formed.
According to Dr. Q. Campbell in
his book "Making Money with Mutton Sheep", "One of the most
successful crosses of exotic rams bred to adapted ewes proved to be the
Dorset Horn X the Blackhead Persian".
The Blackhead Persian sheep, a
hardy, fat-tailed desert breed from Arabia, brings to the Dorper its
hardiness, thriftiness, adaptability, pigmentation and hair covering. It
also brings remarkable fertility, with the ability to breed every eight
months and to produce a high number of twins. In addition, the
Persians have very valuable skins used in the production of fine leather
products. The Dorset Horn rams crossed with Blackhead Persian ewes
produced fast growing and heavily muscled lambs yielding very satisfactory
economic returns under a variety of environmental conditions. The Dorper
ewes from this cross were excellent mothers that could be bred in any
season.
In the early 1950's, a
controversy arose concerning black markings vs. a pure white sheep. Some
breeders preferred a white sheep, called the Dorsian, while others chose
to select for confirmation rather than color and use the black markings as
their trademark. In 1964, the controversy was settled when the blackhead
and white Dorper breeders united into one association calling the black
head sheep Dorpers and with the unmarked being called White Dorpers.
The modern day Dorper is
numerically the second largest breed in South Africa with over 10 million
head (over 1/3 of the total number of sheep). In recent years, the Dorper
has become popular in the Middle East, China, Canada,
Australia, South America, Mexico and the United States.
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