After nearly two months in limbo, the survivors of a cargo ship disaster in the Black Sea — 180 sheep out of more than 14,000 that were being transported — arrived at a new home in the Romanian countryside on Friday, according to the team involved in their rescue.
They were to be slaughtered in Saudi Arabia but have been spared from being butchered, said Kuki Barbuceanu, the president of the animal welfare organization known as ARCA.
“We didn’t save them to be eaten by somebody,” Mr. Barbuceanu said on Friday, shortly after dropping them off at a farm in Peris, about 20 miles north of Bucharest.
The sheep — technically rams because they are all males — have had a rough time of it.
In late November, they were tightly packed into the Queen Hind, a cargo ship headed for Saudi Arabia. Shortly after its departure, the ship overturned.
All of the ship’s crew members were rescued but more than 14,000 sheep died. Most were trapped inside the ship and others were scattered throughout the bay, with their thick soggy fleece weighing them down.
Figuring out what to do with the survivors has been complicated and involved extensive negotiations with the authorities, according to Four Paws, an international animal welfare organization involved in the rescue.
The rams were living on the farm of the exporter, Mr. Barbuceanu said. Because the exporter received insurance money for his losses, he was willing to turn the rams over to animal welfare organizations.
But they needed a home.
Mr. Barbuceanu contacted an acquaintance, who owns a horse farm in Peris and agreed to host the animals. The owner does not particularly like sheep; he likes horses. Still, he was willing to help, Mr. Barbuceanu said. How long the sheep will remain on the farm is unclear.
In the early stages of the rescue mission, some people offered to adopt the sheep.
“I hope they will remember and keep their wishes to have them,” Mr. Barbuceanu said. “Otherwise we have to keep them till the end of their natural life.”
Given that most seem to be about a year old, that could mean tending to them for nine to 10 more years.
What if someone wants to adopt them to eat them?
“No way. They cannot adopt,” Mr. Barbuceanu said. Future guardians will be vetted for other suitability issues, such as financial stability, he added.
Daniel Rosca, owner of Via Transylvania Tours, said he thought that finding people to adopt the sheep might be a challenge.
Mr. Rosca said he thought it was “very cute” what the animal welfare groups were trying to do, adding: “But I don’t know. I wouldn’t adopt one.”
He was pessimistic because all the sheep are males. Romanian households and small farms are more likely to keep female sheep because they provide milk, which can be used for cheese, he said.
Nonetheless, the rams appeared to be in good spirits arriving at the farm on Friday, Mr. Barbuceanu said. Several were limping, he said, but they will soon get X-rays.
They do have a couple of other steps before settling into their new life: first, deworming, then castration.
“Put two rams together, they can fight and kill each other,” he said. “You can imagine how it will be with 180.”
Back in the port city of Constanta, the authorities were still working on how to remove thousands of dead sheep from the harbor.
Martina Stephany, director of the Farm Animals and Nutrition department at Four Paws, said that the overturned ship highlighted the cruelties of the animal transportation business.
Around three million live animals are moved from European countries to other nations every year, Four Paws said. “Clearly, animals cannot be protected on such journeys,” Ms. Stephany said in a statement.
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