Daily Mail

Baa-gain ... or baa-my? Lovable lambs that cost £7k each!

- By Tom Payne

‘They’re docile and ideal pets’

BARELY a week old, these lovable lambs are already worth a small fortune.

Thanks to their rarity – and adorable looks – they are in demand as pets.

The Valais blacknose breed, seldom seen outside their native Switzerlan­d and often called the world’s cutest sheep, are worth up to £10,000 each – 40 times the value of an ordinary lamb.

These three are the latest additions to the flock on a farm in north Devon, where the lambing season is in full swing. In Switzerlan­d,

which banned exports six years ago, the sheep are reared for wool as well as meat.

In the UK, where there are thought to be only a few thousand, they are kept as pets, for breeding and for showing. Both males and females typically sell for up to £7,000 – but the most attractive rams can fetch £10,000.

Chris Slee and Tom Hooper have been breeding Valais blacknose sheep at Halsbury Barton, near Bideford, since 2016, when they invested in some embryos from Scotland. Mr Hooper, a former City economist, said: ‘It’s a fairly straightfo­rward case of supply and demand.

‘The supply is limited as the Swiss have prevented further exports so the ones we have in the country, which would only be a few thousand, cannot be added to by imports and it is not a particular­ly quick process to add naturally to a flock by breeding.

On the other side of the equation, there’s a lot of demand – they look great and are fairly docile so make ideal pets for those with a bit of land who want a pretty, but expensive, lawnmower.’

Mr Slee, whose family have farmed in north Devon for more than a century, added: ‘The prices are a bit crazy but seem to be going up for the good quality stock.

‘We got interested in them a few years ago after going to Holsworthy market and seeing sheep go through the ring for thousands of pounds. I couldn’t believe it – Holsworthy is a small town in north Devon and I have kept sheep my whole life and never seen anything like it.

‘On my family farm we have about 400 commercial sheep and my sister and I breed and show Jacob sheep.

‘But we are always being told by the Government to diversify, so Tom and I took a punt and bought some of these Valais.

‘It has worked out well so far but lambing time can be a bit more stressful as these little lambs are worth 30 or 40 times the values of normal sheep.’

 ??  ?? In demand: Three of Halsbury Barton’s Valais blacknose newborns
In demand: Three of Halsbury Barton’s Valais blacknose newborns

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