Saturday, 23 August 2008

No flies on them, sheepish wool industry adapts to the inevitable, Weekend Australian, 23 August, 2008.

No flies on them, sheepish wool industry adapts to the inevitable

Stapleton, JohnWeekend Australian [Canberra, A.C.T] 23 Aug 2008: 5.
Thanks to selective breeding, go-ahead young farmer Ben Watts, 33, mulesed his last sheep on his property Waidup, outside Orange in eastern central NSW, in 2005. He said the reason many farmers had been slow to climb on the anti-mulesing bandwagon was because most of them had seen sheep die agonising deaths from flystrike and regarded PETA's position as absurd. They resented the way change had been forced upon them by urban greens with no knowledge of the practicalities of farming. "Mulesing is not a job I liked, I don't know any farmer that does," Mr Watts said. "But all it involves is removing a bit of skin.
The industry's research and marketing arm, Australian Wool Innovation, predicts 30per cent of lambs will not be mulesed this year, and most of those that are will receive pain relief. Farmers are also using clips, which gather up the skin that would otherwise be mulesed. Many, such as Mr Watts, have engaged in selective breeding and careful husbandry to protect sheep from flystrike.
Within a matter of weeks, AWI will introduce two new patented processes to replace mulesing. AWI chairman Brian van Rooyen said the treatments would offer "the completion of the range of alternatives that farmers will need to use".

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