Why are the Washington County Fairgrounds offering a reward?
RICHMOND, R.I. — She is red with blond highlights, and she is Sarah Balmforth’s baby. She has small horns, but she doesn’t use them. Aysla, a six-month-old Scotch Highland calf, is missing from the Washington County Fair. She has been missing since Tuesday. The Washington County Fair, which runs through Sunday is held on the Washington County Fair grounds off Route 112. The property sits on over 100 acres of wooded land. Balmforth says she had untied Aysla (pronounced “EYE-la”) in the barn at the fairgrounds Tuesday night, and that Aysla took off after a cow standing in front of her in the barn began to scratch the dirt. Aysla bolted through the barn doors and ran through the open gates of the fairgrounds through the parking lot and into the woods, Balmforth said. “She is really tame, and completely halter-broken. She is my baby,” Balmforth said. “She is friendly. You can lead her around, but she is just really scared. This is her first fair, and she got scared.” Aysla had been schedu
She is red with blond highlights, and she is Sarah Balmforth’s baby. She has small horns, but she doesn’t use them. Aysla, a six-month-old Scotch Highland calf, is missing from the Washington County Fair. She has been missing since Tuesday. The Washington County Fair, which runs through Sunday is held on the Washington County Fair grounds off Route 112. The property sits on over 100 acres of wooded land. Balmforth says she had untied Aysla (pronounced “EYE-la”) in the barn at the fairgrounds Tuesday night, and that Aysla took off after a cow standing in front of her in the barn began to scratch the dirt. Sources: http://newsblog.projo.com/2009/08/cows-gone-missi.