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Sheep drown in floods 11.01.12

SHEEP farmers across Co Donegal are counting the cost of record rainfalls and flooding that saw livestock washed away and drowned last month.
Farmers have reported the loss of some animals due to high tides and rivers bursting their banks. In one incident, eight lambs were swept away and drowned.
Meanwhile, there have been incidences of livestock washed up on the shores of Lough Swilly and Lough Foyle in recent weeks. Malin Head weather station last month recorded double the average rainfall for December.
Donegal IFA sheep sector chairman, Seamus Quinn, said he was aware of several incidents of livestock drowning but that the scale of the problem was likely worse than reported.
"About five weeks ago there was very bad torrential rain right across the county. Floods came right up the fields and pinned sheep against the ditch and they had nowhere to go," said Mr Quinn.
He said sustained wet weather had forced farmers in the North West to house lowland sheep a month earlier than usual.
"The recent rainfall was the worst I've seen in my lifetime. I wouldn't normally house my own sheep flock until the end of January but some of them have been inside now for about three weeks. This was purely down to the severe, wet conditions. We had to bring them off the land and inside for feeding,” added Laghey-based Mr Quinn.
The Irish Cattle and Sheep Farmers' Association (ICSA) also received reports of sheep losses due to heavier than average rainfalls in the North West.
ICSA spokesman, Patrick Donohue, said that, in once incident last month, eight lambs were washed away and drowned near Ballintra while a farmer in Ramelton had to move some 400 sheep to safety.
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