Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Rabbits catch a ride on the back of sheep during floods in New Zealand
Rabbits catch a ride on the back of sheep during floods in New Zealand Photograph: Richard Horne
Rabbits catch a ride on the back of sheep during floods in New Zealand Photograph: Richard Horne

Woolly jumpers: rabbits ride on sheep to stay dry in flood

This article is more than 6 years old

Farmer in New Zealand photographs bunnies hopping on to the backs of his flock during bad weather in the South Island

A New Zealand farmer has a newfound respect for the ingenuity of rabbits after he photographed them riding on the backs of sheep to escape a flood.

Ferg Horne, from Mosgiel in the South Island, was checking on his neighbour’s sheep on Saturday morning after a near-record breaking flood tore through Otago, prompting evacuations and forcing authorities to declare a state of emergency.

Expecting the sheep to be drowned, Horne was relieved to discover the mob perched on a high spot of the paddock standing in about three inches of water.

Map of Mosgiel

And they weren’t the only animals who had acted fast to avoid a watery death. Perched on the sheep’s backs were three wild rabbits, drenched and shivering but alive.

“I’ve never seen anything like it, they were just sitting there keeping out of the water, they must have got to the high spot and then jumped up on to the back of the sheep to stay dry,” said Horne.

“It shows you how resilient they are and why they survive so well.”

Horne said the sheep weren’t “the slightest bit concerned” about the rabbits.

“When I moved the sheep the rabbits fell off, but they ran to a hedge and climbed into the branches. Later when I went back to check the rabbits were gone so they must have survived.”

Horne said he had spent 40 years shooting rabbits on his farm but couldn’t touch these particular specimens after they showed great “pluck” to escape the flood. Rabbits are a declared pest in New Zealand and the government has vowed to wipe them out by 2050.

“I thought those guys deserved to live, so I left them alone.”

Horne’s farm has since cleared of floodwater and the state of emergency has been lifted.

Most viewed

Most viewed