The New Zealand Herald

Ram not owned by pair who died — neighbour

- Jaime Lyth

The ram which killed an elderly couple on a West Auckland property was owned by neighbours and had broken through an electric fence before the attack, according to a local resident.

However, it is not clear if the ram was being housed in a paddock on the couple’s land or was being kept on a completely separate property when it escaped.

A neighbour, who didn’t want to be named, said the community along Anzac Valley Rd, Waitā kere, had been in a “grey” mood since the deaths of Alfred Helge Hansen, 82, and Gaye Carole Hansen, 81, on April 18.

“It’s not a very nice feeling, it’s just horrible even walking up here,” the neighbour said.

“Everything’s gloomy and grey and just depressing and I just don’t want to do anything. You just don’t even want to go outside that side [where the couple were found].”

She said the Waitā kere couple did not own the ram that attacked them and it had “escaped” from a nearby paddock through an electric fence.

“We keep thinking, ‘Why didn’t we hear anything?’ All I can see is the body . . . I saw them [police] shoot the ram.”

She described the tense stand-off between police and the ram before it was fatally shot.

“He was wild, he was aggressive, the way he was standing there looking at the cops — they weren’t coming through the fence.”

She said when rams were raised by humans they were not scared of people and would confront them.

“It was a hand-reared ram, and that’s what needs to get out there — people should not have hand-reared rams because they will turn a few years later.

“We’ve had hand-reared rams and [my] husband has gone out in the paddock with the frying pan because it’s started attacking him.

“They’ve got concrete heads . . . they don’t feel anything.”

She said the couple weren’t expecting the ram to be on their property, so wouldn’t have known they were in danger.

“It’s sickening. They were lovely people just enjoying their retirement. They were in their 80s, he had bad knees, they had no time to get away.”

However, Stuff reported that Helge’s ex-wife, Jan Hansen, said the ram wasn’t a stranger to the property and had lived there for some time.

Police confirmed on Thursday that a “ram was in the paddock at the time we were notified of the deaths at 7.30am today”.

The ram also went after the couple’s son, who held the beast in a headlock and called for help.

“Another party at the scene suffered a minor injury after being attacked by this ram,” police said.

Animal behaviour consultant Mark Vette said that, ironically, hand-reared or pet rams could also be more dangerous.

While a “paddock” ram might steer clear of humans due to its desire to stick with the flock, a pet ram was more used to being in close contact with humans, Vette said.

When that familiarit­y with humans mixes with a natural desire to mate and compete during the breeding season, some rams could be more prone to charge.

“They’re a powerful animal and they can be quite a heavy animal,” Vette said.

 ?? Photo / (above) Cameron Pitney ?? Flowers mark the property of Helge and Gaye Hansen on Anzac Valley Rd in Waita¯ kere after the elderly couple (below) were fatally attacked by a ram.
Photo / (above) Cameron Pitney Flowers mark the property of Helge and Gaye Hansen on Anzac Valley Rd in Waita¯ kere after the elderly couple (below) were fatally attacked by a ram.
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