Advertisement

Giant Australian sheep produces 40 kg wool in one shearing

This handout photo released on September 3, 2015 from the RSPCA shows a giant woolly sheep before getting shorn in the outskirts of Canberra a day after Australian animal welfare officers put out an urgent appeal for shearers after finding the sheep with wool so overgrown its life was in danger. The heavily overgrown sheep had its massive fleece removed on September 3 by an Australian national champion in a life-saving operation that animal welfare officers said may have also set a new world record for a single shearing. Some 40.45 kilos (89.18 pounds) of wool was taken off in one large piece from the animal by Australian Shearers' Hall of Famer Ian Elkins in a 42-minute process that he said was "certainly a challenge". AFP PHOTO / RSPCA ----EDITORS NOTE ----RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / RSPCA" NO MARKETING - NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS - NO ARCHIVES

Press Trust of India        

Melbourne, Sept 3: A giant Australian sheep today yielded 40 kg of wool following a hair cut by five shearers, setting a new unofficial world record, media reported today. Chris, the overgrown sheep was discovered on the northern outskirts of Canberra yesterday as it was struggling to walk due to the weight of his coat. The animal set an “unofficial” world record for the heaviest fleece removed in one shearing, smashing the previous world record by a sheep in New Zealand whose fleece weighed 27 kg, the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) was quoted as saying ABC News.

   The sheep was so woolly that its life was at risk as such animals can develop serious medical conditions if they are not regularly shorn. It underwent a risky shearing operation to remove 40.45 kilograms of wool, almost half of its weight as it weighed in at 44 kilograms after the shearing process was finished. The animal had to be sedated during the shearing process as vets were worried that the animal could die from shock. The RSPCA estimates the sheep, which could barely walk due to the mass of wool, had not been shorn in more than five years. An average fleece weighs about five kilograms.

 

Exit mobile version