Took me a while but found them all. They were the grocery side of the lead exclosure again. But hiding well in the valley. Drove round there once and didn’t see them. Then later saw em from the other side of the exclosure and went round.
Also found the two in GCA and lead them back through to CC.
All looked good. A few little blood splats but obviously ticks. also a few thinning bit of hair. Hard to tell iff moulting or mites at the moment though.
Emergency Procedure
If you need to report an emergency to us such as injured or escaped livestock or damaged infrastructure please follow this procedure:
NOTES:
Thank you!
- Call the office on 01256 381190.
- If no one answers, wait for the answering message which will detail the name and mobile number of the member of staff who is currently on call.
- Phone the on-call member of staff who will then respond accordingly.
NOTES:
- Please do not phone a member of staff directly unless you know they are on-call.
- If you are unsure if a particular situation qualifies as an emergency then please phone the on-call member of staff anyway so that they can make the decision on how to proceed.
- Most importantly of all – please do not report injuries or sick animals via the blog alone – always call the emergency on-call contact.
Thank you!
Tuesday, 31 March 2020
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
-
At 09:20 this morning, the seven Sussex cattle were happily grazing on the long, lush grass in the pasture near ///task.fells.sapping. Young...
-
We are expecting a return visit from the EA to re- sample Horse Pond week commencing 3 September. If it gets the all clear they will re-test...
-
The seven Sussex cattle were at the cow shed at 17:10 this afternoon. Cow 211 and steer 1626 were outside, but were being heavily bothered b...
Sunday 29th March - All 25 seen
At 09:25 this morning, a mixed group of twenty-two cattle were spread out grazing south of James Bond Pond. Several were browsing gorse and ...
No comments:
Post a Comment