Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

Calgary

Ram on the lam in Lethbridge is 'legendary' runaway sheep

"Anyone missing a ram?" As in animal, not Dodge truck. That's the question a Lethbridge College instructor asked after he found one while out mountain biking in a coulee.

Wandering around coulees 'looking for love in all the wrong places'

'I let it get to about three metres from me ... it wasn't aggressive, but it was very direct,' said Lethbridge College instructor Dave McMurray. (Dave McMurray)

"Anyone missing a ram?"

As in animal, not Dodge truck.

That's the question a Lethbridge College instructor is asking after he found one while mountain biking in a coulee during his lunch break.

"I was near a bend, and I looked, and all of a suddenI saw a ram," saidDaveMcMurray.

It looked similar to a big horn sheep, but it wasn't.

McMurray wondered if it was an escaped dog with a cone of shame on its head.

Nope, not that either.

Just a lonely sheep, looking for company, with a bit of cardio thrown in.

"I rode a little bit further down the trail, and I turned around, and it kept running towards me. We kept this up for about a kilometre," McMurray told The Calgary Eyeopener on Thursday.

The ram decided to accompany Lethbridge College instructor Dave McMurray on his afternoon bike ride. (Dave McMurray)

"I let it get to about three metres from me ... it wasn't aggressive, but it was very direct."

McMurray started to headback to the college, andthe ram followedalong the river path for at least a kilometre.

Back at work, he told his colleagues about the ram only to learn they'd all seen it too.

"I've heard people sayit's been out there for months ... years, so there's quite a legend that's grown around this ram."

Turns out it's a domestic sheep that frequently gets away from its owner.

"Apparently, he's all alone and he no longer has a herd ... I guess he's looking for love in all the wrong places," McMurray said.

It dropped by theLethbridge College on Tuesday,where it was photographed peering through a cafeteria door.

People have started calling it Rodney the Ram, or Toot, the flute-playing characterfrom the old Hercules cartoon,McMurray said.

While conservation officers aren't very concerned, the owner is trying to catch it.

So if you spot him, send a tweet toLethbridge College.



With files fromThe CalgaryEyeopener.