Seven Sisters Sheep Centre Explained

50.752°N 0.207°WThe Seven Sisters Sheep Centre was a farm near East Dean, in the Seven Sisters Country Park of the South Downs. It held a large collection of about 50 sheep breeds, including rare breeds no longer raised by commercial farmers, and a number of Southdown sheep.

Besides sheep, other animals on display include goats, pigs, rabbits, guinea pigs, cats, geese and ducks, a cow, a Shetland pony, and a donkey.

Visitors can feed the animals feed pellets, bottle-feed the lambs, or take a ride on a tractor. Terry Wigmore, the owner of the farm, also demonstrates sheep shearing and milking.

Wigmore founded the Centre in 1987 when the estate for which he worked as a livestock manager closed off its livestock operations. He bought 120 of their sheep and began his own business.[1] Wigmore says: "We used to lamb the estate ewes through these yards, and every weekend there would be loads of people looking over the gate, trying to see in. I thought I might make a living inviting them in. The next year we started doing tours, then I decided to make it a full-blown tourist attraction."[2]

It closed in 2016.

Notes and References

  1. News: Nothing as precious as a new born lamb . Eastbourne Herald . Eastbourne . March 10, 2003 . 2010-08-26.
  2. News: Watkins . Jack . A celebration of our shear diversity . Telegraph . May 3, 2008 . https://archive.today/20130421074406/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/3341412/A-celebration-of-our-shear-diversity.html . dead . April 21, 2013 . 2010-08-26.