Rescue & Adoptions
Past Featured Rescues
A Pennsylvania Farmer's Compassionate Decision Brings Nine Sheep to Live at Farm Sanctuary
Update 02/10/05
Thanks
to the compassionate decision of one man and his wife, Punky and
her friends are living the good life at Farm Sanctuary's New
York Shelter. This man, a long-time sheep farmer, raised his
animals next-door to OohMahNee Farm, an animal sanctuary in Pennsylvania.
Curious about the sanctuary, he and his wife started spending time
there, getting to know the staff and animals.
The
more time the couple spent next door at the sanctuary, the more
they changed inside. They began to see animals as living, feeling
creatures, rather than tools of production. They started building
relationships with their own sheep and realized that farm animals
do feel joy and pain, and that they do have their own interests.
They learned, first-hand, that animals enjoy life and fear death,
just as people do.
When
the farmer and his wife helped raise and bottle-feed two fragile,
newborn lambs who had been abandoned by their mother, they felt
closer to their animals than they ever had before. When they witnessed
the stillbirth of a lamb, or saw one of their flock taken by a predator,
they allowed themselves to feel sadness. Most importantly, the farmer
and his wife no longer felt comfortable sending their animals to
slaughter.
The
farmer and his wife were both impacted by time spent at the sanctuary.
When they spoke to each other about their own animals, they knew
it was time to make a change. They decided to get out of the sheep
businesses - right away. They knew getting out was the only option;
they could not bear the thought of sending even one more precious
soul to the slaughterhouse.
The
farmer and his wife did not sell their herd of sheep. Courageously,
they risked their own economic well-being, and surrendered all of
their 145 animals into OohMahNee Farm's custody, expecting nothing
in return. They also donated a portion of their own land, a tractor
and baling equipment to the sanctuary. By opening their hearts to
compassion and extending their mercy to animals, this kind couple
saved 145 lives. In the process, they also transformed themselves.
Due
to the influx of sheep at OohMahNee, Farm Sanctuarys New
York Shelter gladly took in nine of the sheep to provide them
with lifelong care. Once the sheep were at the shelter, caregivers
were surprised to find out that all six of the female sheep were
pregnant! They were also underweight when they arrived. Knowing
that malnourishment in pregnant ewes can take a toll on unborn lambs
and cause difficult pregnancies, we kept a very close eye on the
expectant mothers, fed them good, nourishing food and hoped for
the best.
UPDATE!
02/10/05
On October 22, 2004, Punky gave birth to two beautiful lambs named
Aedan and Addison. The two boys were born healthy and strong, and
were very excited to discover everything they could about the big,
new world in which they had arrived. Punky and her sons spent many
happy weeks here at our New York Shelter before being adopted by
a kind couple in Hector, New York. Now, all three will live out
the rest of their days in peace and comfort with loving, vegetarian
parents.
After
Aedan and Addison were born, we created a maternity ward of sorts
in our sheep barn and moved the remaining mothers-to-be into that
area. Keeping the expectant mothers in this private suite allowed
us to keep a close eye on them and provide them with medical care
during their pregnancies. The location of the new "ward"
also gave us the freedom to close the mothers in the barn at night,
avoiding the risk of a baby being born outside in the cold.

Dore

Grace |
A little
over a month after Aedan and Addison were born, a ewe named Olive
gave birth to two beautiful girls, Grace and Dore. Both were born
prematurely and were very tiny as a result, but thanks to their
doting and protective mother, they thrived. Olive recovered quickly
after their birth, and all were thankful that her delivery had been
an easy one.
Unfortunately,
another ewe named Savannah, did not have such an easy pregnancy
or delivery. Just days after Grace and Dore were born, Savannah
fell and injured herself. At first, we thought Savannah was only
bruised and sore, but when she did not show signs of improvement
in a few days, we decided to take her to Cornell University's Veterinary
Hospital. Radiographs taken at the hospital revealed that she had
ruptured the cruciate ligament in her knee, and her doctors told
us that surgery was the only option to repair her leg. Not knowing
how far along Savannah was in her pregnancy, however, we could not
risk inducing delivery so that we could go ahead with the surgery.
Seeing
that Savannah's injury was causing her discomfort, we kept her at
Cornell for several days. The pain she was experiencing had caused
her to stop eating, and doctors began to fear that she would develop
pregnancy toxemia from lack of nutrition. They kept her on IV drugs,
fluids and nutrients as a precaution, and on December 12, she gave
birth to three lambs. Bonnie was the first to be born and the strongest.
Next came Marlene, a very weak and tiny lamb, born with low protein
levels. She received a blood transfusion from her mother to gain
strength, and gradually improved. Jeanne, the last to arrive, was
born nearly 30 minutes after Marlene, and was totally unexpected,
because she had not shown up on earlier sonograms. The deliveries
went well for Savannah, despite her injury, and she was happy and
rested easily after the births.
Five
days after Savannah's girls were born, Taylor, the youngest female
sheep in the flock from OohMahNee, gave birth to a baby girl we
named Isabel. Such a young sheep herself, and one who had never
given birth before, Taylor seemed almost surprised to have a baby.
Soon, though, while gazing down at the tiny brown and white lamb
next to her, her motherly instincts took over and she proudly accepted
Isabel as her own.
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Isabel
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The
day after Isabel was born, we had yet another birth here at our
New York Shelter. A ewe named Tallulah, who seemed to have the largest
and most pregnant belly from the very beginning, gave birth to Libra,
Marcia, and Sweetie. Sadly, Sweetie was stillborn, but the other
two lambs were healthy. An older sheep, Tallulah was likely used
to breeding multiple lambs and having them taken away from her to
be sold, so we were not surprised to find that she was very protective
of Libra and Marcia. She stomped her foot at us if we got too close
to her babies, so we gave her plenty of space to be alone with the
lambs.
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Libra

Marcia
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Finally,
Midge - mother to Taylor (Isabel's mother) and a nine-month-old
lamb we named Graydon - was the only ewe left who had yet to give
birth. Excited to help Midge welcome her offspring into the world,
we stayed close by her side and monitored her condition. To our
dismay, just days before she was to deliver, she collapsed and seemed
very close to death. We immediately called a veterinarian out to
the farm to see what could be done. The doctor diagnosed her with
milk fever, which is a dangerous and sudden loss of calcium caused
by the onset of lactation. To our relief, by quickly restoring the
calcium levels in her body, we were able to get her up again right
away. Two days later, she gave birth to two boys. One of the boys
was stillborn, but the other was healthy. We named this little angel,
J.J.
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J.J.
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Two
days after J.J. was born, his mother got sick again, and was soon
to be diagnosed with a very dangerous condition called Ovine Ketosis.
We were forced to rush her to Cornell, leaving little J.J. without
a mother to care for him. We quickly moved J.J. into our new hospital
facility, where Savannah and her triplets were living. J.J. made
friends with the triplets right away and Savannah took care of him
as best she could. She did not, however, have enough milk for her
triplets, let alone for another baby, so we bottle-fed J.J. while
his mother was away. During this time, he grew very attached to
his caregivers, running to greet them at feeding time, and even
curling up in their laps to sleep.
Midge
recovered well here at the farm after a rather lengthy stay at Cornell,
but never showed interest in her son J.J. after she returned. She
did, however, immediately attach herself to her older son, Graydon,
and to Taylor, leading us to believe that she was unaware that J.J.
was her lamb. Despite this, J.J. continued to thrive, bonding with
many of the other sheep and lambs in the flock and gaining healthy
weight. Thanks to a special dog coat he wore to keep warm, he was
able to spend even cold winter mornings running and frolicking with
his friends.
Savannah successfully weaned her lambs and underwent surgery to
repair the ruptured ligament in her leg. She recovered here at the
farm in a pen next to her lambs, where she was able to spend time
with them but avoid injury during her rehabilitation.The rest of
the mothers and lambs remained cheerful and healthy in the months
following the births of the babies. Happily, a very kind family
in Henry, Virginia agreed to provide a safe, permanent home for
seven members of the flock, including Midge, Graydon, Taylor, Isabel,
Tallulah, Libra, and Marcia. The rest of the flock will live out
their lives here at our New York Shelter.
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