Things You'll Need
- Power drill and drill bit
- 2 4-by-4-inch wooden posts, 4 feet long
- Shovel
- 6 2-inch wood screws
- Level
- One 2-by-4-inch piece of wood, 8 feet long
- 4 square plastic buckets with metal handles
- 16 baby bottle nipples with screw-on caps
- Rubber cement
Instructions
Find a spot on your property with room to set up an 8-foot-long lamb bar. This spot should also be a place where the lambs naturally gather.
Dig 2 holes, about 2 feet deep, with your shovel, and place a post in each hole. Fill in the hole with dirt and rocks so the posts are solid.
Turn the 2-by-4-inch piece of wood so the 4-inch side is facing you. Drill a pilot hole on each end of the 2-by-4. Drive a wood screw into each hole and mount each end to the front of the wooden posts. Use a level to mount the wood evenly. The lamb bar should now look like a fence.
Place 4 wood screws at evenly spaced intervals along the lamb bar. The buckets will hang from these screws.
Drill a hole 1 inch above the bottom of one bucket toward the center. Make the hole large enough for the baby bottle nipple to fit through but not the screw-on cap. Drill a hole of the same size, in the same position, on the other 3 sides of the bucket.
Repeat the drilling process for the other buckets.
Brush the inside of the bucket where the screw-on caps meets the inside wall with a small amount of rubber cement. Brush some rubber cement on the upper portion of the screw-on cap that comes in contact with the plastic bucket. Insert the baby bottle feeder into the hole from the inside of the bucket and hold for 20 seconds until rubber cement has taken hold. Repeat this process for the other 15 feeders.
Set the buckets out to dry for at least 2 hours.
Hang the buckets on the screws of the lamb bar and fill them with milk. Gravity will force the milk downward to the baby bottle nipples.