Tuesday, April 06, 2010

Unexplained sheep attacks 'caused by aliens in UFOs', farmers claim

A series of bizarre incidents involving sheep in Shropshire have led to farmers’ claims that aliens are attacking their livestock. Farmers near Shrewsbury claim to have witnessed sheep being “lasered” by unidentified light from UFOs.

They have linked the unexplained incidents, where sheep’s brains and eyes were removed, to the mysterious orange lights in the sky. They have found sheep with “neat holes” while their brains and other internal organs were removed. Other animals have lost eyes or had their flesh “carefully stripped away”, usually on the left side.



Phil Hoyle, 53, who has spent almost a decade investigating how the livestock have died, said the UFOs were found to have roamed a 50-mile "corridor" between Shrewsbury and Powys. Mr Hoyle and 15 members of the Animal Pathology Field Unit, claimed they witnessed UFOs at work last month while working during the night at a Welsh hill farm near Radnor Forest.

“The technology involved in these attacks is frightening, these lights and spheres are clearly not ours. They are built by technology and intelligence that's not from here.” He added: “For a short while it looked more like a Star Wars battle.” Next day he interviewed farmers and "all but one had some type of unusual disappearance of animals or deaths with strange injuries", he said.

3 comments:

arbroath said...

UFO's with technology not from here -" They are built by technology and intelligence that's not from here.” He added: “For a short while it looked more like a Star Wars battle.” "

....And so they come all the way from the other side of the galaxy --- to kill -----sheep----- ...?

arbroath said...

maybe they like a good old fashion donna kebab :P

arbroath said...

Funny, isn't it that The Animal Pathology Field Unit lists no animal pathologists on its site. Nice name, chaps, to make a group of people who believe in flying saucers sound like a scientific establishment.

Whereas, scientific method would say. "We have seen dead animals with injuries we can not explain.
We have also seen lights in the sky which we can not explain".
Until you can clearly show causation, then you don't blame one phenomenon upon another.
And seeing lights in the sky is a big leap from assuming extraterrestrial veterinary surgeons harvesting brains by keyhole surgery.

Let's see Mr Hoyle's evidence, not his light sabre posters.