Showing posts with label Lamb. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lamb. Show all posts

Spring in her step: Lamb left hobbling on shattered front leg given new lease of life with prosthetic limb

By Wil Longbottom


New lease of life: Carmen the two-week-old lamb is jumping and playing again after she was fitted with a prosthetic leg at Animal Place, Grass Valley, California


A lamb left hobbling around after breaking her front leg has been given a new spring in her step thanks to a prosthetic.

Carmen was found hungry, badly injured and near death in California after limping around with her shattered leg for two weeks.

She was taken to Animal Place, a sanctuary in Grass Valley, where doctors were forced to amputate the limb due to infection.


A local prosthetic company agreed to donate a leg to the two-week-old lamb, and she now wears it for a few hours a day as she becomes used to it.

Jamie London, animal care manager at Animal Place, said: 'She was gonna die without any kind of treatment. Her mother was afraid of her so she wasn't getting fed.'

Marji Beach, who also works at the animal sanctuary, added: 'Someone saw this baby lamb suffering immensely and they didn't just turn away. They turned compassion into action.

'The sheep are intimidated by this weird metal device on her so we'll give them time to adjust to it as Carmen does.'


Learning to walk again: Carmen has the prosthetic on for an hour a day as she gets used to it


Recovering: The lamb broke her leg when she was two days old and was left to fend for herself when her mother stopped feeding her

Carmen broke her leg when she was just two days old. She lived on a small farm where sheep were used to clear weeds and the farmer refused to treat the leg.

The little animal wears the prosthetic for an hour a day as she relearns how to walk with it and it will need to be replaced as she grows bigger.




source:dailymail

Saved from the chop: Paul O'Grady comes to the rescue of Winston the wheelie bin lamb

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER

Not so savage: Paul O'Grady with Winston the lamb and RSPCA Inspector Caroline Hall at O'Grady's home in Kent, where he has taken in the abandoned animal


Paul O'Grady is famous for his love of dogs but the TV star has taken in a pet lamb after it was dumped in a wheelie bin.

The month-old lamb, named Winston, was found in the rubbish in Manchester on April 18.
And after hearing about it's sad plight, O'Grady, who already has a small flock of sheep, volunteered to re-home the animal.

The lamb received treatment for an ulcerated eye but was otherwise unharmed.

It was bottle-fed by a fosterer around the clock before being transported to O'Grady's property in Kent last week.


Bin through a lot: Winston was dumped in a wheelie Bin in Manchester on April 18 and was suffering with an ulcerated eye


The comedian and television presenter said: 'Winston is a big, strong, healthy boy now - nothing like the state he was in when they found him.

'He's skipping around and has got his own barn so he is very happy.

'He's very friendly and loves human company. He's in his element.'


Rubbish: Winston was found in a bin in Manchester's inner-city Levenshulme area


RSPCA inspector Caroline Hall said: 'We still need to find out who was behind Winston being dumped, but it's so nice to see him gambolling around in his new home.

'We are very grateful to Paul and his animal care staff for helping to give Winston such a great new start in life after his unhappy beginnings.'

Anyone with information about how the lamb came to be abandoned can contact the RSPCA on 0300 1234 999.


source: dailymail

How a white ram and 37 white ewes produced a flock of entirely BLACK lambs

By Daily Mail Reporter


The flock of 37 white ewes - and one white ram - has produced 60 black lambs


A farmer was left stunned when her flock of 37 white sheep gave birth to 60 lambs - that are all BLACK.

Sally Du Toit, 39, and husband Jacob, 29, helped deliver the first black lamb on April 2 this year at their smallholding near Royston, Herts.

Since then their flock of 37 white ewes has given birth to a total of 60 black lambs, all sired by a one-year-old ram called Rowley.


Incredibly, the South African Dorper ram also has a white fleece, leaving mother-of-one Mrs Du Toit baffled by the freak births.

In sheep, a white fleece is the result of a dominant gene that actively switches colour production off - that is why most sheep are white.

This means a black fleece in most sheep is recessive, so if a white ram and a white ewe are each heterozygous (have the black and white forms of the gene for fleece colour), in about 25 per cent of cases they will produce a black lamb.

This is quite a rare occurrence though, and in most white sheep breeds only a few white sheep are heterozygous for black, so black lambs are usually much rarer than this. That is why this case is so special.

Mrs Du Toit said: 'We have had 60 lambs this month and every single one of them is black but all of their parents are white.

'Usually you see just one black sheep in an entire flock and that's where you get the saying from, but all of ours have this jet black coat.

'It is amazing. We don't know why it has happened. When the first few were born we thought it was great but now lamb after lamb has come out black.

'We feel blessed. I love the colour. People are stopping on the cycle path and in their cars to look at the lambs and ask us if they are a special kind of breed.'

The first black lamb was delivered on April 2 this year at a smallholding near Royston, Herts., and since then all other lambs have been black

It is believed a genetic throwback is the reason for the colour of the lambs - but the gene must be very strong for this to happen


Mr and Mrs Du Toit have 37 ewes from three different breeds: Norfolk Horn, Suffolk and Texel.

Every adult sheep at their smallholding has a white fleece but several ewes, and Rowley the ram, do have a black face.

Peter Morris, chief executive of the National Sheep Association, has described the flock as 'odd' and 'unusual'.

He said: 'To have an all-white flock and black lambs on this scale is unusual and I have never heard of such an instance in such quantities.

'You often see one or two in a flock, and that's where the saying comes from, but 60 from 37 ewes is rather odd.

'It can be one of two things: a genetic throwback or a rogue black ram in the area has been breaking into the field.

'A genetic throwback is likely but the gene must be very strong. To have it on this number is quite rare. They are right to feel blessed.'


source:dailymail

Bizarre rescue of lamb after passer-by hears bleating... coming from inner city WHEELIE BIN

By JAYA NARIN

Luck escape: The white lamb is recovering at a community farm having been found dumped in a wheelie bin


When a woman was filmed dropping a tabby cat into a wheelie bin, animal-lovers were justifiably horrified.

But, in an even more bizarre case, a white lamb has been found dumped in a wheelie bin in a street in Manchester.

The alarm was raised by district nurse Gillian Powell when she heard a noise from the container while making a call on a patient.


Found: The unappealing street in Levenshulme, south of Manchester where the lamb was dumped is far removed from rural fields where he would be more at home


She called colleague Georgina Holmes, who was in a health centre round the corner in Heaton Moor.

‘She was anxious about opening the bin because she didn’t know what she’d find,’ said Mrs Holmes.

‘I went straight over to meet her. We couldn’t believe it when we lifted the lid. The last thing we expected to see was a lamb.’

The two nurses lifted the frightened animal out and wrapped him in a blanket before ringing the police and RSPCA.

They then took the lamb to the nearby Shore Fold Community Farm to wait for animal welfare officers. RSPCA inspector Caroline Hall said: ‘Obviously it’s not every day a lamb is found dumped in a wheelie bin.


Friends: RSPCA Inspector Caroline Hill cuddles the adorable young lamb at the sanctuary where he is being cared for


‘As you’d imagine, the lamb’s discovery caused a lot of interest among people in the area and we’re very grateful to them for everything they did to help. Who knows what would have happened otherwise.’

The lamb, believed to be just a month old, has been checked by a vet. He was uninjured and healthy, apart from a slight ulceration to an eye, for which he is being treated.

He has yet to be given a name, but is being looked after by an RSPCA foster carer and being bottle fed.

He will be found a long-term home on a community farm. The lamb had had his tail docked and been castrated, as is common for males.

The RSPCA wants to speak to a man seen in the street just minutes before the animal was found on Monday. Inspector Hall said: ‘He was driving a light blue Audi, thought to be an A4 or A6.


Spring in his step: The young lamb, who is yet to be named, enjoys the open fields and fresh air before he is found a long term home


Wrapping up warm: The lamb might be a little worn down from his ordeal, but while wrapped in a blanket he enjoyed supping milk from a bowl


Looking for a home: The lamb, which has to be bottle-fed, is now being looked after on a farm and it is hoped he will be fostered as a pet


For the chop? It is suspected the lamb was stolen to be sold for meat but was considered too young to be useful and was dumped


‘The model name had been replaced by the word Robert or something similar.’

Last August, Mary Bale, 45, became a hate figure when she was filmed on CCTV dropping Lola the cat, four, into a bin in Coventry.

She was fined just £250 for causing unnecessary suffering after a judge ruled the public vilification was punishment enough.


source: dailymail

The lamb with an extra spring in his step: Five-legged 'Jake the peg' doesn't let his extra limb get in the way

By Daily Mail Reporter


Frolics: Five-legged lamb Jake the Peg doesn't let his extra limb slow him down


Ewe won't believe your eyes... this plucky spring lamb is frolicking about just fine despite being born with five legs.

The unusual creature, who has been aptly named Jake the Peg, was born last week with two normal hind legs and three front legs.


But the bizarre deformity hasn't stopped Jake leaping around his field in Newnham, Northants, with hundreds of other newly born lambs.

And he continues to baffle his owners by beating the odds - as most lambs born with deformities tend not to last long.


Bizzare: The unusual animal has two normal hind legs and THREE front legs. But despite the deformity he can get about just fine


Owner Pip Hopcraft said: 'He's a tough one alright - we've had more than 600 lambs born over the past few weeks and some are inevitably born with a deformity.

'However they don't usually last long. And it is especially uncommon to have a lamb born healthy with five legs.

'But Jake the Peg appears well enough and it doesn't seem to be causing him any problems.'

The little lamb was born part of triplets which makes it even more unusual Jake was healthy enough to survive with a deformity.

But Pip added: 'I'll be putting an elastic band around his extra leg today and it will eventually drop off.

'There is bone inside the extra leg but no bone attaching it to Jake so it wont effect him.'


source:dailymail