Well I guess you'll be limited by the breeds and genetics that are available here. I had a quick look at a Canadian Sheep Association website and it was kind of :shock: :shock:
In the UK the maternal breeds were traditionally the Cheviots (white faced sheep) and the Blackfaces (dark faced horned). They would be bred pure on the hills but crossed with the Border or Bluefaced Leicester breeds to produce F1s for production on better land. These F1s would be bred to suffolk, texel etc terminal sires.
Here are a few pictures to illustrate.
Scottish Blackface ewes (a beautiful picture taken by a friend of mine.)
Scotch Mule ewe lambs - the F1 progeny of a Blue Leicester and a Blackface ewe. The best commercial sheep I know of.
North Country Cheviot ewe
North Country Cheviot ram - notice the masculine characteristics.
A Canadian style North Country Cheviot - it looks like the cattle craze of the 80s
:shock:
a Canadian Border Leicester ewe
A Canadian Border Leicester ram - spot the difference from the last picture :shock: :shock: The ram is supposed to look masculine :roll:
Maybe the breeders in Canada are trying to produce one with higher ground clearance to get over the snow problem :???:
In conclusion the easiest care breed would probably be the Lleyn (Welsh) but I haven't seen any sign of them in Canada. I would suggest going for the NC Cheviot but it will depend on the type you can find. They would be good to breed straight as you get a replacement female and a good male by-product. Blackfaces likely wouldn't do any good here as the land would be too strong - take them off the poor soils and they get fat and idle pretty quick. Suffolks are a good terminal sire on almost all breeds but they make dumb mothers.
Even more than cattle you need the female sheep to look feminine and the males masculine.