Taranaki Daily News

Oh deer: Prim the motherly kelpie fosters fawn

- Catherine Groenestei­n

Prim the kelpie loves her babies, even if they have hooves not paws.

The 8-year-old red kelpie is a selfappoin­ted chief babysitter at Stoney Oaks wildlife park near Inglewood.

Her latest charge is an orphaned fallow deer fawn named Delilah.

As well as greeting visitors and watching over her owners Gail and Trevor Simons, Prim spends her time mothering baby animals.

The dog “babysits” piglets while their mothers graze, and has helped raise lambs, kids, calves and other fawns.

“She’s amazing, she’s 8 years old, she loves every animal,” Gail Simons said.

But she was surprised when Prim started producing milk for her new “baby”, even though she last had a litter of pups two years ago.

Normally, deer instinctiv­ely dislike dogs, but Delilah, who had a tough start to life, quickly bonded with Prim, Gail said.

“She had a skinned nose, skinned knees and sore ears, she had been jumping out of fences, and was terrified of the dog where she had been.”

Prim spontaneou­sly started making milk for Delilah, enough that the fawn sometimes wasn’t hungry enough to drink its bottle.

“She’s tiny for her age. She likes eating grass and pellets too, and maybe she’s getting a bit more than I thought off the dog.”

Prim had always been extremely motherly, Gail said, and previously helped raise two other fawns that Gail was bottle feeding.

The dog, which was then pregnant with her own litter, would try to suckle the fawns, Gail said.

“When she had the pups, I had to keep her away from the fawns once they realised there was milk coming out, so the pups wouldn’t miss out.”

When she’s in season, Prim spends her days in the rabbit enclosure, and even the guinea pigs and bantams with their chicks are safe with her.

She lies down with piglets, calves, lambs and kid goats, and licks them.

“She’s 100% trustworth­y, she loves everybody and has never hurt anything,” Gail said.

Prim likes to spend as much time as possible in the paddocks with her foster babies and other animals, she said.

It could be a case of a dog taking after its owner’s characteri­stics.

After nearly 35 years running the private wildlife park, Gail still loves her life there.

“Animals are the love of my life, my passion in life,” she said.

Prim is one of many animals in her menagerie of hand-raised and friendly critters that love attention from visitors.

“People love the hands-on [experience] here, they can go out into the paddock and cuddle a Nubian goat or a Valais blacknose sheep, we have guinea pigs and rabbits,” she said.

There are pigs that love to have their bellies scratched, and cattle which can be hand-fed hay.

* Stoney Oaks is open each day over Easter and again in the school holidays. Check the Facebook page or answerphon­e message for times and days.

 ?? LISA BURD/STUFF ?? Delilah has developed a strong bond with Prim.
LISA BURD/STUFF Delilah has developed a strong bond with Prim.
 ?? ?? Gail Simons with Delilah, who is tiny for her age.
Gail Simons with Delilah, who is tiny for her age.

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