Two sheep trapped in snow in Northern
Ireland since the spring blizzard over three weeks ago have been found
alive. They survived in an air pocket in a ditch covered in 6ft (1.8m) of snow. They
spent 23 days without food in freezing conditions in the north Antrim hills. Farmer Sam Wallace said it was a "miracle" they were still alive. As the thaw began, the Blackface rams had access to water and there are signs
they started to eat each other's wool.
The rams, each worth more than £1,000, were trapped in a ditch beside a stone
wall in hills near Slemish mountain. Another ram was with them but died. The Wallace family farm was one of 790 farms caught up in the snow blizzard
that led to the deaths of more than 20,000 sheep last month. Mr Wallace and his son, Graham, presumed their rams were among the dead until
a neighbour, Richard Jolly, spotted them earlier this week while out walking his
dog.
Graham said: "I couldn't believe it. When we got to them they weren't in
great condition, understandably. It was hard to know what to do. They had faced starvation for three weeks.
We let nature take its course and just let them roam. If we had pampered them they would have died - they couldn't have handled a
big meal." At first, Graham did not believe the sheep could have survived in the snow
for so long. "I had to see it to believe it," he said.
YouTube link.
"It was great to see them alive. It gives you a bit of hope when something
lives, given what farmers have been through in this area." His father, Sam, said the stone wall created air pockets below the snow that
helped the rams to survive. But he added: "At the end of the day it was a miracle. You hear in the
scriptures about miracles. There are still miracles today - and this was definitely one of them. It was
amazing to see them still alive." It will take the sheep some time to fully recover but they are back in the
field with the rest of the flock, and gradually regaining weight.
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