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Snowdonian Mountain Bequeathed To Sheep

A Welsh hill farmer has left his land including one of the area's finest peaks to his flock of prize-winning Badger Faced Welsh Mountain Sheep


Posted: 1 April 2003
by Jon

A Welsh farmer has bequeathed land, including one of Snowdonia's most spectacular mountains, to his beloved sheep.

Terry Davis and his family had farmed the area below Moel Siabod for over 70 years concentating on building a flock of pure-bred, prize-winning, Badger Faced Welsh Mountain Sheep. Sadly the decline in hill farming and limited financial opportunities resulted in sons Bryn and Llewellyn seeking work elsewhere and after the death of his wife two years ago, Davis was thrown on his own devices until he died suddenly last month aged 87.

Remarkably, in his will published yesterday, the farmer left over 70 acres of land including the summit and northern slopes of shapely Moel Siabod to his flock of Badger Faced Sheep. Solicitor and executor of the will, David Jones of Llanberis agreed that the bequest was an unusual one, but stressed that he was looking into ways of managing the land on behalf of the animals, which he did not believe were legally capable of carrying out most of the day to day tasks inherent in running a hill farm.

Master of all it surveys, but day to day
running of a farm by sheep is mutt on

'It's quite possible that we will look into the feasibility of a tenant farmer managing the land for the financial benefit of the beneficiaries of the will,' commented Mr Jones. 'In that case any surplus income will go to bettering the conditions of the sheep on the hill, improving facilities for them and sourcing high quality feeds.'

'It's all very Orwellian...'

An RSPCA spokesperson commented: 'It's not unusual for bequests to be made to domestic pets, but this is the first case we know of where a working business has been left solely to agricultural livestock. It's all very Orwellian and we are watching developments with interest. Our first priority obviously, is the welfare of the sheep.'

Meanwhile Davis's two sons are believed to be contesting the will on the grounds that the farmer was not of sound mind in the months preceding his death. 'His thinking had become rather woolly,' said Bryn at an impromptu press conference. 'We've nothing against the sheep, but the mad old bastard has really fleeced us.'

As far as we can tell there are unlikely to be any implications for access to the mountain, though walkers may want to listen out for bleating renditions of the classic cry of 'Get orf moi land'.


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Discuss this story

1/4/03 This has to be a joke? Right?!

Posted: 01/04/2003 at 10:58

No, it's pukka, it was on the local news last night.

Posted: 01/04/2003 at 11:05

Are you baaaaking mad, of course it's true.

Posted: 01/04/2003 at 11:11

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