That should stop the ram raiders: Farmer dyes his flock orange to deter sheep rustlers
By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
Last updated at 12:07 PM on 12th April 2011
Last updated at 12:07 PM on 12th April 2011
Farmer John Heard decided desperate measures were needed to stop the sheep rustling that was decimating his flocks.
And his solution to the problem has created an eye-catching sensation on his farm after he turned his sheep orange.
The 48-year-old has put his flock of 250 blackface ewes through a harmless dip of orange dye making them so highly visible wary thieves are giving them a wide berth.
I can see ewe! Farmer John Heard and his son James were forced to take desperate measures after their flock was decimated by rustlers and coated some 250 sheep with harmless orange dye
Mr Heard, who runs his livestock farm near Okehampton, Devon had lost 200 sheep over the past few years but says the orange dye is working wonders.
He explained: 'Sheep rustling has become a big problem with ewes worth around £140 each. My flock roams Dartmoor and I was getting mighty fed up with losing so many.
'My son James suggested the orange dye and although it produces some strange-looking sheep it has done the trick and I haven’t lost one this year.
'It works because they are so easy to distinguish making it easier for me and my neighbours to keep a wary eye out for them. Plus the rustlers are obviously nervous about stealing such easily distinguished animals.'
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Valuable commodity: The National Farmer's Union has warned that the financial hardship facing the country has led to a big increase in rural crimes like sheep rustling
The non-toxic dye does the sheep no harm and they are lambing in peace this year, added Mr Heard who is the third generation in his West Country family to run the farm where he also raises cattle.
The dye eventually wears off with no side effects for the animals but has caused bemused reactions from onlookers.
The National Farmer’s Union has warned that the financial hardship facing the country has led to a big increase in rural crimes like sheep rustling.
There has been a five-fold increase in sheep thefts this year and a spokeswoman for the NFU Mutual, who insure farmers, said: 'There has been a sizeable rise in livestock rustling, particularly targeting sheep.
'The price of lamb is so high and in a recession people may be more willing to accept meat from unreliable sources.
'But stolen sheep tend to be taken to unlicensed abattoirs raising the issue of meat being sold without the normal health checks. If you buy from those sources you obviously cannot be absolutely certain the meat is fit for human consumption.
'In the circumstances orange sheep seem like a very good idea.'
Mr Heard got the inspiration for his orange flock after his son told him he knew a farmer in Scotland who had dyed his sheep before an agricultural show.
Mr Heard added: 'Other farmers as well as a fair few ramblers have been shocked but others have said they are now willing to try the idea if it works.
'At the moment it is doing exactly what I hoped it would and stopping the rustlers in their tracks.'.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1376050/That-stop-ram-raiders-Farmer-plagued-sheep-thefts-paints-flock-orange.html#ixzz1JJK4hdlL
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