The Chronicle

Pair kept ducks and chickens in cramped crates

- By SARA NICHOL Court reporter sara.nichol@reachplc.com

CRAMPED in tiny, faeces-covered cages inside a small Northumber­land home, these were the conditions a couple forced their 23 ducks and chickens to live in.

Douglas Oliphant and Michelle Wilkinson kept the birds in plastic recycling crates covered with netting and rabbit hutches in their two-bedroom, mid-terraced house in Lynemouth.

In one overcrowde­d crate alone, six cockerels were being forced to live, North Tyneside Magistrate­s’ Court was told.

The pair also kept a dog and two cats in “inadequate­ly small” cages, which didn’t have a clean supply of fresh drinking water nor suitable bedding, prosecutor­s said.

All the animals were seized after an inspection by the RSPCA and Oliphant, 57, and Wilkinson, 54, were each charged with three counts of failing to ensure animal welfare.

The couple, of Dalton Avenue, in Lynemouth, have now been banned from keeping fowl after they pleaded guilty to all three offences.

Alex Bousfield, prosecutin­g on behalf of the RSPCA, said the animals were seized on July 27 this year.

“This is a case that involves quite a large number of animals, 26 in total, all housed in quite a small dwelling - a mid-terraced, two-bedroom house, which was entirely unsuitable for the occupation of these animals”, Mr Bousfield continued.

“It was so crowded and it was not suitable and not healthy for the defendants either. It was not suitable for the animals or the defendants to live in. RSPCA inspectors intervened at an early stage so, thankfully, only one duck had any health issues and that was something to do with a leg and not related to its housing conditions.

“Six cockerels were being kept in a recycling tub with netting on the top and other birds were being kept in rabbit hutches. Clearly, they were being fed and watered as there were no problems with the animals’ weight.”

The court heard that the chickens and ducks were covered in their own faeces, as were the cages they were being kept in.

Mr Bousfield said Oliphant and Wilkinson had not been deliberate­ly cruel but rather didn’t have the knowledge or capability to look after the animals.

Mr Harrison, defending, said the retired couple, who already owned the cats and dog, had bought the birds in a bid to make a “better and more simple” life for themselves.

He told the court that Oliphant was intending to keep them in his allotment but hadn’t got it ready in time.

“With a mixture of naivety and poor planning, the birds grew and their needs grew much quicker than anticipate­d,” Mr Harrison added.

The court heard that the pair, who had been living in “hoarding conditions”, had now cleaned out their home.

They were each given a 12-month conditiona­l discharge and were banned from keeping fowl for 12 months. The couple will be allowed to keep the two cats and the dog.

 ?? ?? Some of the chickens kept by Douglas Oliphant and Michelle Wilkinson
Some of the chickens kept by Douglas Oliphant and Michelle Wilkinson
 ?? ?? The chickens and ducks were covered in their own faeces
The chickens and ducks were covered in their own faeces

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