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Be Well.
David
Part 1: U. K. Sheep Mutilations and Red-Orange Spheres
© 2010 by Linda Moulton Howe
“A retired police officer saw a fleet of six red-orange spheres “How do you catch a sheep at that time of the night (April 5, 2010) in the dark
- In January and February 2010, the British Animal Pathology Field Unit (APFU) founded by David Cayton and Phil Hoyle, investigated three, bloodless sheep mutilations in the Radnor Forest, Radnorshire, area of Wales (red circle in above map). A year ago in March 2009, the men also investigated the bloodless mutilation of four ewes on the same farm. Now in the first week of April 2010, a dozen young sheep were discovered cut up bizarrely on the Low Weatherhill Farm in Hamsterley, Durham, in northern England. The owner, Kay Thompson, said the animals had been skinned, gutted and decapitated. “How do you catch a sheep at that time of the night, in the dark, and butcher them like this? It's got to be somebody who knew what they were doing.” The April 2010 killings are not classic mutilations, such as the Radnor Forest, Wales, sheep deaths or the bloodless excisions of ears, eyes, jaw flesh, tongue, genitals and rectums that characterize the worldwide animal mutilation phenomenon reported in both hemispheres for the past half century. But these strange April sheep deaths resonate with the question: who or what is killing and mutilating animals in the United Kingdom now and in the past? The Animal Pathology Field Unit started in 2001 because there were several bloodless animal deaths that year, whhich fit the pattern of typical cattle, horse, sheep, goats and other animal mutilations in North America. Phil Hoyle, an APFU founder, was born in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England fifty-three years ago. He worked in the steel industry pulling steel until he injured the inner lining of his tendons and had to leave that work. Phil and Mike are now traveling to farms in the 50-mile-long by 30-mile-wide triangular region of very high strangeness from Oswestery, Shropshire, England in the north to Leominster in the southeast and on to Rhayader, Wales in the southwest. Between Leominster and Rhayader is the Radnor Forest region where many people have seen unidentified aerial, red-orange spheres and at least one farmer has had repeated sheep mutilations.
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