Skip to main content

Your internet browser is out of date and not supported by this website. For the best viewing experience on wool.com, please update your browser to one of the options below.

AWEX EMI 1783 +16
Micron 17 2407 +9
Micron 18 2336 +3
Micron 19 2231 +30
Micron 20 2154 +42
Micron 21 2088 -2
Micron 25 1040 -2
Micron 26 879 -10
Micron 28 672 -23
Micron 30 578 -30
Micron 32 510 +2
Micron 16.5 2425 +12
MCar 1046 +17

Making More From Sheep is a best practice package of management information and tools for Australian sheep producers, developed by AWI and MLA. Almost 250 leading sheep producers and technical experts helped develop the 12 linked online modules, which cover subjects ranging from soils and pasture to wool and meat marketing, animal health, genetics and farm sustainability.

Articles That Might Interest You

The WA woolgrower’s guide to containment feeding
Containment feeding has become a vital tool for WA woolgrowers to protect soils and maintain or increase stock condition through the increasingly long summer-autumn feed gap. This guide provides practical steps on site selection, nutrition and infrastructure, featuring expert insights from Esperance woolgrower Simon Fowler on how to lift flock performance while reducing costs through containment feeding. Read more
Improving conception, scanning results and lamb survival
Improving conception, scanning, and lamb survival is a multi-faceted game that begins months before the rams go out. This guide outlines the critical links between pre-joining nutrition, mating duration, and pregnancy management, providing Western Australian woolgrowers with a roadmap to optimise ewe energy reserves and lift whole-flock productivity through the challenging summer-autumn period. Read more
Staying ahead of Barber’s Pole: Managing worm risk in a changing WA climate
Internal parasites remain one of the costliest challenges for WA woolgrowers, but the "rules" of engagement are shifting. Evidence shows barber’s pole worm egg counts are now remaining above risk thresholds year-round in regions previously considered low-risk. This article breaks down the integrated worm management pillars—monitoring, nutrition, grazing, genetics, strategic drenching and vaccinating—required to break the cycle of reinfection and protect your bottom line. Read more