Yes it most certainly can,had one caught in a fence,pulled the fence out for two hundred yards and escaped,they hate being on their back and struggle like hell to get up,usually in seconds
4 sheep 2+2=4 2 sheep: they are both in front and in back ^^
First you take the sheep acrossthen you go back and get the cabbagethen you take the sheep back and take the wolf acrossthen you take the sheep across and you will winIT WILL WORK:)
To solve it you, 1) take he sheep to the other shore 2) go back and get the wolf 3) bring back the sheep 4) grab the cabbage and bring it to the wolf's shore 5) go get the sheep and bring it back
The expression is not actually "rode on the sheep's back" but "built on the sheep's back". Australia is often referred to as the country that was built on the sheep's back. That is because the wool industry is one of Australia's earliest industries, and the one that initially propelled Australia into success as a self-sufficient colony, able to trade with England in its own right. Australia's economic success and political development was "built on the sheep's back".
Rams are male sheep. Ewes are female sheep.
The sheep that Australia was once said to be riding on the back of, was the Merino.
A sheep fold is a sheep pen, a place of safety. The phrase is to welcome someone back after they have been away.
Sheep grow wool and it is shorn off. And no it doesn't hurt them.
no
Sheep shearing is when a farmer cuts the woolen fleece off of the animal. This process doesn't hurt the animal. The wool will grow back but it is best to do it in warmer weather so the animal doesn't get too cold.
well the most common is either a spray-painted number on the back of the sheep or a tag pierced into their ear...sheep are rarely branded...
Take the sheep across take the wolf across take the sheep back to the other side take the hay across go back and get the sheep