Cold
spring kills thousands of newborn lambs
Helicopters
drop food as farmers in isolated rural areas struggle to save animals
26
March, 2013
Fears
for the UK's already embattled upland sheep-farmers have been raised
by the return of winter to hill country, which has cost thousands of
newborn lambs their lives.
Emergency
crews have helped with rescues in Scotland, Northern Ireland, Wales,
Cumbria and the Pennines. But the sheer graft of digging into
snow-blanketed fields has come too late for many flocks.
Shielded
by thick fleeces, ewes have largely survived the drifts, which have
topped 16ft (5 metres) in many parts of the fells and mountains. But
in spite of modern protective measures, including plastic jackets to
warm young lambs, rescue has often come too late.
In
Northern Ireland, helicopters have been deployed to carry out food
drops to animals in isolated rural areas cut off by the snow. At the
height of the extreme weather, up to 140,000 homes and businesses
were without power as heavy snow and ice brought down power cables in
counties Down and Antrim.
With
power restored to most households and businesses, the focus has
switched to the plight of thousands of livestock cut off in snowbound
mountainous areas without food.
Sinn
Féin's agriculture minister, Michelle O'Neill, said: "It is a
severe situation. People have said that this is worse than 1963. Some
of the scenes are harrowing – to see farmers bring in sheep that
have died in the snow. People are angry and concerned. We have an
animal welfare issue. Farmers need a food drop. We have a
surveillance helicopter so that we can see where the livestock are
and then we have an MoD helicopter, which is prepared to make a food
drop."
The
blow to agriculture and the economy has been worsened by the scale of
power failures in which more than 3,000 people were cut off for a
fifth day in parts of Argyll and the island of Arran. For the first
time in Scottish and Southern Energy's history, two large metal
pylons were toppled by snow and ice. The last time a pylon fell was
in 1987, in the far north of Scotland.
Drifts
are still blocking roads in hilly areas, with continuing fierce cold
and occasional snow flurries doing nothing to ease the situation. The
Met Office issued further yellow, "be aware" alerts for ice
in Scotland and north-east England and snow in the north-east,
Yorkshire and the east Midlands. It said severe cold weather and icy
conditions would last at least until Friday morning.
"Bitterly
cold easterly winds will persist this week, bringing snow showers to
north-east England and light snow flurries across other areas of
England," it forecasted. "With lying snow and partial snow
melt during the daytimes, icy conditions are likely during the
nights."
Social
service departments in affected areas are stretched to reach isolated
homes, and the Age Sector Platform called for an emergency winter
fuel payment to pensioners as the chill persists. The prevailing
easterly winds are forecast to keep temperatures exceedingly cold
until late April, except in the south-west where their clash with
milder Atlantic fronts promises weeks of rain.
Paul
Mott, a forecaster with MeteoGroup, said drier conditions were likely
for most of the country in the runup to Easter but a slow thaw at the
end of the week would be able to make little progress. He said: "We
should see temperatures creeping up to 4C or 5C (39F or 41F) during
the days by about Friday but there is still going to be a very sharp
frost during the night. For the foreseeable future it is going to
stay cold, and the snow on the ground is likely to last for some
time."
Transport
problems also persist, with the AA attending 16,000 callouts on
Monday, 6,000 more than the seasonal average. Rail services have been
better on Tuesday but drifting snow has blocked trains in the
Midlands between Rugeley Trent Valley and Hednesford and signalling
problems have disrupted services in East Anglia between Thetford and
Norwich and in Kent between Queenborough and Swale.
Malcolm
Roberts, a farmer in Oswestry, Shropshire, had been expecting 600
lambs before the end of the month but is now having to pile up small
victims of the snow while rescuing his 200 ewes. He said: "Every
day since the snow hit, and surely for days to come, I'm having to go
and pick up lamb corpses from ewes who have given birth outdoors.
Newborns can only survive for around half an hour in the freezing
temperatures – and the snow is so thick that some are even buried.
"We
have to get through it. What else can you do? But there's no doubt
the financial impact will be absolutely devastating. This is my
living, and if you're not successful raising lambs you can't survive:
that's the bottom line. We spend more trying to feed the animals,
more on fuel, more to run the farm. But as livestock die, you end up
having less produce to sell and are hit hard."
The
farm lacks room for indoor lambing, a problem widely shared by small
sheep-breeders. Vegetable crops have also been affected. Tim Gilbert,
who grows fruit and vegetables on the edge of Hereford, said: "After
last year's horrendous, rain-filled summer, we had been hoping that
2013 would be much better. It's always disastrous when it snows.
We've had to stop completely for at least a fortnight. The effect not
only hits us but also impacts on our customers, who rely on us."
A
spokesman for the National Farmers Union said: "Severe weather
warnings are still in place and the majority of farmers are out
there, battling freezing temperatures, to protect their livelihoods,
families and income. It's relentless."
The
power blackout in Scotland has been described as the worst for 30
years, with 400 engineers working to repair lines. A spokesman for
Scottish and Southern Energy said: "Scottish Hydro Power
Distribution engineers are continuing their intense and brave efforts
to restore power to homes in Argyll and Arran following unprecedented
weather conditions.
"Instances
of significant damage to the electricity network infrastructure have
been among the worst seen for 30 years, with the weight of line icing
pressurising the transmission lines around Crossaig, where
transmission towers were felled by the conditions. Transmission
overhead lines staff have started working to make towers safe and
carry out temporary repairs after finally gaining access to the
location earlier today."
Scottish
Power said: "Our engineers have encountered some of the most
difficult conditions they have ever faced attempting to restore
supplies." The company has set up eight field kitchens in Argyll
and Arran and delivered 18 large generators and 50 smaller ones to
supplement existing resources such as the generator at Arran War
Memorial hospital, which is keeping power going. Royal Navy
helicopters and lifeboats have joined ferries in taking supplies to
the islands.
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