Un-baaaaa-lievable: Wild mountain goats invade locked-down town in North Wales

Un-baaaaa-lievable: This wild bunch is completely ignoring rules on social distancing.
A herd of wild goats in Llandudno (Pete Byrne/PA via AP)
A herd of wild goats in Llandudno (Pete Byrne/PA via AP)

LONDON (AP): Un-baaaaa-lievable: This wild bunch is completely ignoring rules on social distancing.

With humans sheltering indoors to escape the new coronavirus, mountain goats are taking advantage of the peace and space to roam in frisky clumps through the streets of Llandudno, a town in North Wales.

Andrew Stuart, a video producer for the Manchester Evening News, has been posting videos of the furry adventurers on his Twitter feed and they are racking up hundreds of thousands of views.

He said the goats normally keep largely to themselves, in a country park that butts up against Llandudno.

But now emboldened by the lack of people and cars, the long-horned animals are venturing deeper into the seaside town. The UK has been in lockdown for the past week to combat the spread of the coronavirus.

“There’s no one around at the moment, because of the lockdown, so they take their chances and go as far as they can. And they are going further and further into the town,” Stuart told The Associated Press in an interview Tuesday from his parents’ pub in Llandudno, where he is waiting out the pandemic.

His videos show the goats munching on people’s neatly trimmed hedges and trees in front yards and loitering casually on empty streets as if they own the place.

“One of the videos on my Twitter shows that they were on a narrow side street and I was on the other side and they were scared of me. They were edging away from me. So they are still scared of people,” Stuart said.

<em>A herd of wild goats in Llandudno (Pete Byrne/PA via AP)</em>
A herd of wild goats in Llandudno (Pete Byrne/PA via AP)

“But when there’s hardly anyone around on the big streets, they are taking their chances, they are absolutely going for it."

<em>A herd of wild goats in Llandudno (Pete Byrne/PA via AP)</em>
A herd of wild goats in Llandudno (Pete Byrne/PA via AP)

"And I think because it’s so quiet, and there’s hardly anyone around to scare them or anything, that they just don’t really care and are eating whatever they can.”

<em>A herd of wild goats in Llandudno (Pete Byrne/PA via AP)</em>
A herd of wild goats in Llandudno (Pete Byrne/PA via AP)

For most people, the new coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks.

<em>A herd of wild goats in Llandudno (Pete Byrne/PA via AP)</em>
A herd of wild goats in Llandudno (Pete Byrne/PA via AP)

For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia, and death.

<em>A herd of wild goats in Llandudno (Pete Byrne/PA via AP)</em>
A herd of wild goats in Llandudno (Pete Byrne/PA via AP)

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