The sheep accept a snack of oats and maple syrup. Courtesy photo

KILLINGTON โ€” The administrators of a Facebook group called โ€œKillington Localsโ€ chose a new featured photo for their page on Thursday: two sheep peeking over the backseat of a Volvo. 

The picture marked the end of a journey for the sheep in question, who escaped from their new home at Mission Farm on Sunday, and for a bevy of locals who helped rescue them. 

Over five days, the sheep crossed Route 4, slept atop Killington Ski Resort and descended to Pico Resort, where a group 15 coaxed the animals into capturing range with the help of oats and maple syrup. 

Morgan Baughmanโ€™s mother is a vicar at the Church of our Saviour, which is located at Mission Farm, an idyllic riverside property near Route 4.ย 

โ€œWe had actually just finished up a church service, and we were doing a yoga walk around these trails down by the river. That’s when it happened,โ€ Baughman said of the Sunday escape.

A loose dog on a walk with its owner spooked one of the sheep, which had joined the farm as permanent residents only a week earlier. One tangled itself in the fence, creating an opening. The other two animals ran through it and into the nearby woods. 

Morgan Baughman, left, and Jimmy Pickett, right, a summer intern, at Mission Farm on Friday. Photo by Emma Cotton/VTDigger

โ€œA bunch of people who were doing the yoga walk helped us look for the sheep in the woods,โ€ Baughman said. โ€œWe saw them, but we couldnโ€™t rally them, so we just kept on, pushing them further and further into the woods. Eventually, we lost track of where they were.โ€

Later that night, someone saw the escapees across the road, by a nearby ski lift.

โ€œThey’re very good at dodging people.โ€ Baughman said. โ€œSo even when we did have half a dozen people surrounding them, they always managed to slip between us.โ€

The โ€œLocalsโ€ page saw frequent updates throughout the week as residents, spotting the animals in various parts of town, alerted Baughman and a group of interns who are spending the summer tending to chickens, bees and sheep at the farm and church.

On Monday, one person posting on the Facebook page asked, โ€œanyone lose three sheep?โ€ with a photo of the animals walking down Route 4. 

The view from the sheep pasture at Mission Farm, located off of Route 4 in Killington, on Friday. Photo by Emma Cotton/VTDigger

โ€œAny word on the sheep?โ€ read a graphic posted Tuesday. One commenter called it the โ€œmost VT post ever.โ€

Intern Caity Stuart responded that the group โ€œspent all morning trying to collect them but they continually outwitted us.โ€ She added, โ€œWeโ€™ve called in more help to join us tomorrow. To be continued!โ€

By Wednesday, a patroller at Killington called the Mission Farm crew and said the sheep were sleeping at the top of the mountain. The team rushed over. Jimmy Pickett, an intern, said the animals seemed happy when the group approached them but darted away when they got close.

โ€œSomebody on a four wheeler followed them down to Ramshead,โ€ Pickett said. โ€œAt that point, they were off trail.โ€

After five days on the move in Killington, the sheep hitch a ride home on Thursday. Courtesy photo

Between Wednesday and Thursday, the sheep made their way down the mountains, finally landing in the parking lot of Pico Mountain Resort. 

Tom Alcorn, senior program coordinator for Vermont Adaptive, the offices of which are located at Pico, first saw the sheep in the parking lot. He pulled in after an errand and found them licking salt off the ground. 

โ€œI went into the office and alerted everybody, and a call went out amongst the community,โ€ he said. Five staff members from Vermont Adaptive assisted in the rescue, according to Alcorn. โ€œWe rallied,โ€ he said.

Having seen the Facebook posts, Alcorn knew to call Mission Farm.  

Baughman was in the middle of a summer environmental economics class when he got the call. โ€œI jumped up,โ€ he said. โ€œI threw on my running shoes and some shorts and a T-shirt, popped in my Volvo,and sped up there.โ€

Arriving on scene, he spotted a group of eight people guiding the sheep away from Route 4. One person had tupperware containers filled with oats and maple syrup, a snack Baughman said the sheep enjoyed but only until the capturers approached. 

โ€œI would go for oats and syrup, too, if I had wandered away from my home for [five] days,โ€ Alcorn said.

The crowd grew until around 15 people were there, attempting to capture the running animals. They nabbed one and placed it in the car, but it escaped. Baughman ran laps around the building, into the woods, toward a lift and back again, chasing the last sheep until it tired. 

โ€œThere were people from the ages of 12 years old to probably in their late 80s who were part of this crazy sheep chase,โ€ he said. โ€œEmployees, residents, visitors.โ€

Once the animals were captured, Baughman drove his car into the pasture to deliver them. The group celebrated with cake.ย 

Morgan Baughman offers the sheep some grain on Friday after the animals returned home. Photo by Emma Cotton/VTDigger

Stuart took to Facebook, thanking โ€œeveryone who cheered us on, alerted us of their whereabouts, gave us rides up the mountain, helped with their capture, and delivered some of the best sheep jokes around.โ€

With Mission Farm now high on the minds of some Killington residents, Baughman and Pickett hope to see more of them visit the farm, which has trails and public events. They clarified one new rule: Dogs must be leashed.

Locals posted to Facebook with their own celebrations of the animalsโ€™ return. โ€œThey’re baaaa-ck!โ€ wrote one of the pageโ€™s administrators above the photo of the sheep in the Volvo.

Gary Scannevin, who appears to have aided in the capture effort, posted his own report:

โ€œBREAKING,โ€ he wrote. โ€œFugitive sheep apprehended at Pico after [five] days on the lamb. Bystanders described the scene as, โ€˜shear madness.โ€™ Ewe herd it here first.

โ€œAllโ€™s wool that ends wool.”

A farm intern prepares the sheep for re-entry at Mission Farm. Courtesy photo

VTDigger's senior editor.