The quintuplets arrived at Croft Farm in Uffington in the early hours last Thursday – and incredibly, it’s not the first time it’s happened at the farm
A ewe has beaten odds of one-in-a-million by delivering a set of five healthy lambs at a family farm. The quintuplets were born at Croft Farm, in Uffington, Lincolnshire, in the early hours of April 9.
Remarkably, the very same occurrence took place at the farm — run by sisters Liz, Kate and Susan — 48 years ago in 1978. The sisters represent the third generation of the Genever family to manage the farm, which is home to approximately 300 sheep.
Susan Genever-Jones, 52, who also works for the National Association of Agricultural Contractors, said: “When the mother was scanned to check she was healthy five lambs showed up on the scan. We knew we had to feed her more as she was carrying more than most – and she was absolutely enormous during pregnancy.
“Two arrived at around 2am last Thursday and by 4am she had the others – it was a really lovely surprise. I did have a quick look at the odds, and it says one-in-a-million but I don’t think it even happens that often. We might get four to one sheep once a year so you might get that from one sheep out of around 500.
“But to have five and for them all to live and be healthy is very rare indeed – plus mum did it all by herself. They are all doing really well. You can’t keep all five with mum, so two have stayed with her while two others have been bottle-fed and hand-reared.
“Another one has been taken on by an adoptive mother who lost her own lamb this year. So they are all still on the farm, albeit in different places. We had about 240 to lamb this season and we’ve got about 15 left. That has been over the last three weeks, which is okay considering the weather we had this winter.”
The likelihood becomes even more remarkable given that the lambs represent the second set of quintuplets to arrive at the farm, which was established by their grandfather, Albert, in the early 1950s.
Liz added: “Kate and I were very young back in 1978 so we don’t remember it. But to have lightning strike twice at the same farm almost 50 years apart I suppose makes it even rarer. Liz was born two years after that but I’m sure we’ll all remember this for a long time.”


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