Meet the Flock #4: Panda
Story follows!
Meet the Flock #4: Panda
Story follows!
He is probably the most affectionate sheep I've ever known, and runs up for cuddles as soon as he sees you. If you should try and leave before delivering a full set of cuddles then he'll butt you in the back of the knee to let you know you can't go yet.
But why would you ever want to leave? There can't be many better ways to spend relaxing time than cuddling with this fluffy and affectionate chap. 🐑
Here he is yesterday, so you can see how his wool is growing back; by Spring he'll doubtless be an exuberantly fluffy boy.
He's growing up big and strong - look how tall he was, and this is a few months ago now!
He's growing up now, and third in the hierarchy of the flock. He remains a complete and utter cuddle bug mind.
Here he is receiving a stash of Digestives from the same source. He is a gentleman of course and shares his good fortune with the rest of the flock.
He's been an absolute joy ever since. He loves not just cuddles but actually to snuggle and will stand there absolutely content as you hold him and cuddle him. In summer if you sit down in the field he'll come and climb into your lap. He is just a super affectionate and loving chap.
He's so cute he even gets fan mail. He's received letters and parcels of Digestive biscuits from a little girl (who has the same name as our donkey) and her brother. They've even visited him with their parents.
At first he was a little bit shy, and for a couple of days it was a big achievement even to be able to touch his wool; and he didn't know what Digestive biscuits were at first. After a couple of days I was able to give him a little skritch - and although he'd been kindly treated next door, no doubt, I don't think he'd ever had a really proper skritch before.
He *melted*. Leaning in and sighing and wiggling in happiness. In a way that was the first real moment of his new life.
And so Panda arrived here on a somewhat damp February morning, a bit confused at first, in unfamiliar surroundings although really just over the fence from where he'd been. A million miles away in terms of his life expectancy though.
Here he is moments after coming out of the trailer, flanked by the two escapees, looking rather damp and vulnerable.
So a few days later our neighbour comes round in his Landy, towing a trailer. We prepared to receive the two errant boys, and our neighbour says "ah, there's someone else in there, seemed like he wanted to come with your two. The kids call him Panda. Of course if you don't want him, send him away and he'll be off to market next week anyway".
Send him away? Gentle reader, take a look at this picture and ask yourself how anyone could even *think* of sending him away to a bad fate.
Panda is effectively another of Skippy's rescue sheep. His story began in January this year, when Skippy and Brambles decided it would be a lark to go on holiday to my neighbour's field.
Not that conditions are such that they want to escape from here; far from it, they are spoiled rotten here. But they do have a fair bit of interest in what goes on over the fence on my neighbour's side, particularly if more sheep are there, and I think they just wanted to socialise a bit.
Anyway I wasn't unduly bothered by it, although we resolved to find out where egress had been made and fix up the fence at that point. We'd told our neighbour of the situation and he said he'd round them up and drop them off in a few days when he had the time. It wasn't really a worry as we get on well with our neighbour, and he knows our sheep, there was no danger of anything bad happening to them. We could even see the silly pair over the fence any time.
Bobinas P4G is a social network. It runs on GNU social, version 2.0.1-beta0, available under the GNU Affero General Public License.
All Bobinas P4G content and data are available under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license.