'My sanctuary for disabled sheep was blown down'

Charlotte Reynolds A brown shelter in a muddy field with blue tarp. Sheep are eating the wet hay. Charlotte Reynolds
A fundraiser has been set up to help pay for the damage caused by Storm Bert

The owner of a sanctuary for sheep with additional needs has said it was partially destroyed during Storm Bert.

The Smallest Flock Sheep Sanctuary near Shaftesbury in Dorset was battered by the strong winds and heavy rain on Saturday night.

More than £1,000 of damage was caused when a field shelter was blown down and hay to feed to sheep was left unusable after being soaked through by the rain.

Charlotte Reynolds said despite the disruption the sheep coped well during the bad weather: “We’ve got an old blind ewe. We also have a sheep within the flock that has no eyes.

"She was born that way so her friends wear bells so she knows where they are but she’s been with us for the last seven years."

Despite being blind, Blinky Belinda coped well during the storm

Ms Reynolds founded the sanctuary in 1997 and it is home to 42 sheep from different backgrounds.

The team spent the summer getting ready for the winter because they had previously lost a shelter to bad weather.

They tried to pull the polytunnel back together and dry out the hay but £1,200 worth of damage had been done.

Many of the herd are older, live with additional needs, or have been saved from going to slaughter.

“We have some with smaller needs, with under shocked jaws and things like that so, they’re all different, it’s not just a commercial flock of young sheep to look after", Ms Reynolds explained.

Charlotte Reynolds A mix of brown and cream coloured sheep stood outside of their shelter in the middle of a green field. Charlotte Reynolds
The team are racing to repair the damage before more bad weather hits

A fundraiser has been set up by one of the volunteers to help pay for repairs.

Ms Reynolds said. the group tried to fix the damage because the herd needed a dry place to shelter when more bad weather arrives.

“They do like somewhere to go when it is heavy rain but, obviously where it’s been raining again, we’ve had to just try and recover it.

“A lot of the hay will go to waste because it’s just too wet, all the way through, and we won’t be able to feed it to them.”

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