Devastated, worried villagers:
First one sheep jumped to its death. Then stunned Turkish shepherds, who had left the herd to graze while they had breakfast, watched as nearly 1,500 others followed, each leaping off the same cliff, Turkish media reported.
In the end, 450 dead animals lay on top of one another in a billowy white pile, the Aksam newspaper said. Those who jumped later were saved as the pile got higher and the fall more cushioned, Aksam reported.
``There's nothing we can do. They're all wasted,'' Nevzat Bayhan, a member of one of 26 families whose sheep were grazing together in the herd, was quoted as saying by Aksam.
The estimated loss to families in the town of Gevas, located in Van province in eastern Turkey, tops $100,000, a significant amount of money in a country where average GDP per head is around $2,700.
``Every family had an average of 20 sheep,'' Aksam quoted another villager, Abdullah Hazar as saying. ``But now only a few families have sheep left. It's going to be hard for us.
That's actually really sad. I wonder if there's any way we can help them?
By the way, the lemming thing is a myth.
I'm not suprised that the whole lemming thing is a myth. How could people actually believe that a wild animal could be suicidal? I guess I can answer my question, they believed Disney. Still, are there ANY non-human animals that intentionally kill themselves? Maybe I'm wrong, but I have always believed that suicide was a uniquely human phenomenon.
The lemming story, if interpreted as mass suicide, is obviously wrong, but animals and people can be stampeded into danger, where many will die. Absolute power seekers attempt this continually; and, so much so, that if lemming behavior is seen in people, one can surmise that someone stands to increase their power thereby.
I'm not suprised that the whole lemming thing is a myth. How could people actually believe that a wild animal could be suicidal? I guess I can answer my question, they believed Disney. Still, are there ANY non-human animals that intentionally kill themselves? Maybe I'm wrong, but I have always believed that suicide was a uniquely human phenomenon.
Posted by: Troy on July 9, 2005 11:11 AM