
-
UK-France migrant returns deal takes effect
-
Japan sets record temperature of 41.8C
-
Banned Russian media sites 'still accessible' across EU: report
-
Bangladesh's Yunus calls for reform on revolution anniversary
-
Russian strikes kill three in east Ukraine
-
Israel poised to order new Gaza war plan
-
Dutch are first to buy US arms for Ukraine under NATO scheme
-
Oil giant BP returns to profit in second quarter
-
Saudi Aramco profit drops for 10th straight quarter
-
Beijing lifts rain alert after tens of thousands evacuated
-
Record heatwave blasts northern Vietnam
-
Saudi Aramco profit drops 22 percent on lower prices
-
Japan sets new record high temperature of 41.8C
-
Gabon forest cave reveals clues about prehistoric central Africa
-
Death of a delta: Pakistan's Indus sinks and shrinks
-
Gen Z shift, high costs force UK nightclubs to reinvent
-
Water shortages spell trouble on Turkey's tourist coast
-
Dutch windmill village churned by overtourism debate
-
Malaysia tycoon pleads guilty in Singapore to abetting obstruction of justice
-
England face searching Ashes questions after India series thriller
-
Zverev to meet Khachanov in ATP Toronto semi-finals
-
Swiss 'Mountain Tinder' sparks high-altitude attraction
-
Hong Kong hit by flooding after flurry of rainstorm warnings
-
Asian markets track Wall St rally on Fed rate cut bets
-
Gaza war deepens Israel's divides
-
Beijing lifts rain alert after evacuating over 80,000
-
Decision time as plastic pollution treaty talks begin
-
Zverev ignores fan distraction to advance to ATP Toronto semis
-
Remains of 32 people found in Mexico's Guanajuato state
-
Trump tariffs don't spare his fans in EU
-
Brazil judge puts ex-president Bolsonaro under house arrest
-
With six months to go, Winter Games organisers say they'll be ready
-
Rybakina to face teen Mboko in WTA Canadian Open semis
-
Australia to buy 11 advanced warships from Japan
-
Five years after Beirut port blast, Lebanese demand justice
-
Stella Rimington, first woman to lead UK's MI5 dies at 90
-
Trump admin to reinstall Confederate statue toppled by protesters
-
Will DEA Cole Dismantle Marijuana Research Blockade - MMJ Biopharma Will Be His First Test Case
-
BioNxt Solutions Reports Pending Patent Grants in Europe and Eurasia, Strengthening IP Protection for Proprietary Sublingual Cladribine-Based MS Treatment
-
Star Copper Announces Plans for Fully Funded Fall 2025 Phase 2 Drill Campaign in Golden Triangle of BC
-
Rybakina advances to WTA Canadian Open semis
-
Brazilian judge places ex-president Bolsonaro under house arrest
-
Brazil judge places ex-president Bolsonaro under house arrest
-
NGOs caught between juntas and jihadists in turbulent Sahel
-
NBA Spurs agree to four-year extension with Fox: reports
-
Stocks mostly rebound on US interest rate cut bets
-
Boeing defense workers launch strike over contract dispute
-
Grand Canyon fire rages, one month on
-
Djokovic withdraws from ATP Cincinnati Masters
-
Brazil's Paixao promises 'big things' at Marseille unveiling
SCU | 0% | 12.72 | $ | |
RBGPF | 0% | 74.94 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.87% | 23.07 | $ | |
RIO | 0.58% | 60 | $ | |
BCC | -0.77% | 82.71 | $ | |
CMSD | 1.18% | 23.63 | $ | |
SCS | 38.6% | 16.58 | $ | |
GSK | 0.32% | 37.68 | $ | |
NGG | 1.14% | 72.65 | $ | |
BCE | -1.12% | 23.31 | $ | |
RYCEF | 2.14% | 14.5 | $ | |
RELX | 0.73% | 51.97 | $ | |
JRI | 0.76% | 13.2 | $ | |
VOD | 0.72% | 11.04 | $ | |
BP | 2.28% | 32.49 | $ | |
BTI | 2.16% | 55.55 | $ | |
AZN | 0.86% | 74.59 | $ |

Hi-tech herd: Spain school turns out 21st-century shepherds
Gripping a sheep firmly between her legs, Vanesa Castillo holds its head with one hand while she tries to shear off its thick fleece with electric clippers.
"It's scary!" said Castillo, 37, slightly unnerved by her first attempt at sheep shearing at a school for shepherds in western Spain.
"You have to pull the animal's skin taut, really slowly, so you don't cut it," explained Jose Rivero, the professional sheep shearer giving the course.
Sheep shearing is just one of the classes offered at the school in Casar de Caceres in rural Extremadura to counter the flight from the land that has left large swathes of inland Spain thinly populated.
Set up in 2015, the idea was "to bring in people who love the countryside", said Enrique "Quique" Izquierdo, who runs the school.
It aims to provide all the training and resources needed to create "a shepherd for the 21st century... with the most up-to-date methods in a sector where the traditional and the cutting-edge merge."
Much of Spain's sheep and goat farming is concentrated in rugged Extremadura. The school at Casar de Caceres is one of several across the country, the first set up in the northern Basque Country in 1997.
- Tech and tradition -
"The traditional image of a shepherd wandering through the fields all day" doesn't exist any more, said Jurgen Robledo, a vet who said the students are taught how to use many hi-tech tools including milk control programmes.
This year, 10 students are taking the five-month course which also includes hands-on experience of working with animals.
Thibault Gohier, 26, is learning how to milk goats and to identify whether any of them are sick, which could affect the quality of their milk.
"You need to use your fingertips as if they were your eyes," said Felipe Escobero, who heads the farm where the school is based, as they feel a black goat's mammary lymph nodes at the top of the udder.
When they're healthy, "they should feel like an almond", Escobero added.
The course also covers financial matters and how to fill out certificates attesting to animal welfare or pesticide use.
Completely free, it is funded by the Cooprado livestock farmers' cooperative.
Vet Robledo said modern hi-tech tools mean shepherds can now "measure the individual (milk) production of each animal.
"Such data can let a farmer see if production has dropped due to a subclinical mastitis infection by detecting a drop in production in a certain number of animals."
Unlike normal mastitis, such infections don’t cause any visible changes to the milk or udder appearance, making them difficult to detect, although they do affect the farmer's bottom line by reducing milk production and quality.
- Different backgrounds -
Some students already work in farming and want to specialise, while others are completely new to the field, such as Vanesa Castillo, who is taking the course with her 17-year-old daughter Arancha Morales.
Originally employed at an old people's home until it shut down two years ago, leaving her scrambling for work, her dream now is to have a sheep farm.
"We're looking for a way to bring home some money," said her daughter, whose father can't work after having an accident.
Both women know they face an uphill battle, above all to find an affordable piece of land for their flock, a common problem across Extremadura.
Thibault Gohier comes from a very different background.
A young Frenchman who loves animals and the countryside, his dream is to have "a bed and breakfast with a small farm attached with about 30 animals" in a mountainous area of France.
As the other students are learning to shear, El Ouardani El Boutaybi is feeding dozens of restless goats who are scampering around a pen.
"I did the shepherds' school and all the practical courses in June 2020... and then they took me on to work with them," said the 20-year-old, who comes from the coastal town of Nador in northeastern Morocco.
He got to Spain in 2017 after crossing the fence into the Spanish enclave of Melilla in North Africa, where he spent time in a centre for unaccompanied minors before being transferred to the peninsula.
"I've got a future working in the countryside," he said proudly.
Y.Nakamura--AMWN