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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2010
As with other species, traditional methods of sheep husbandry in the tropics are almost all extensive, usually involving shepherding on unfenced pastures in bush or even desert grazings. However, in both Nigeria and Ghana, it is not uncommon for small family flocks of sheep, or sheep and goats, to be confined to the compound behind the house. A room with a door opening on to the compound (either a part of the house or in another corner) is set aside to provide shelter from rain. The flock is fed partly on kitchen waste, such as plantain and cassava peelings, and partly on cut grass or the leaves of trees, the latter particularly in the dry season.