Scrapie confirmed on Mana Island quarantine station
Slaughter of sheep on Mana Island
Burial of sheep on Mana Island
By Dr Clive Dalton
Slaughter and burial at Mana

| The funeral pyre for 300 sheep on Mana Island. Photo by Tim Harvey |
When the first 300 East Friesians and Finns were destroyed on Mana on 3-4 August 1976, their carcasses were burned, as the numbers were small compared to the flock of 1900 in 1978 that had to be buried on site.

| The sheep up in flames. Photo: Alan Julian |
John remembers having to arrange for a large barge from Nelson, as local ones were too small to get a D6 bulldozer from Mana beach (the wharf was not strong enough) to Mana Island. Before the D6 got on board the barge, the driver had to push up a ramp of shingle to get aboard the barge. Getting off on Mana beach was no problem John said.

| The barge at Mana wharf used to transport the D6 to the island. Photo by Tim Harvey. |
The whole slaughter and burial operation took 29 people 2.5 days to complete, including the removal of 300 brains for histopathological examination, as well as recording the number of foetuses present in the pregnant ewes, cleaning and disinfection of the slaughter area – and filming, presumably for posterity. I wonder where the film is now?

| The burial pit on the west side of the island. Photo by Alan Julian |

| MAF staff involved in sheep slaughter (John Dobbie’s memory) – Nick Dimmock, Garry Trow, Neville Ames, Don Cameron, Charles Grbic. Photo: Alan Julian |

The sheep in the burial pit on Mana Island after counting lambs in utero. The D6 bulldozer is filling in the hole.
Photo by Alan Julian
What’s your Reaction?
+1
+1
+1