Monday, 9 April 2018

Last Weekend,

two goats were discovered to be in a predicament,


 after they had walked out on a beam beneath the Mahoning River Bridge in Pennsylvania, they ran into an obstacle at about 200 feet into their adventure, Todd Tilson, operations manager in the maintenance department of the Pennsylvania Turnpike, reports that the brown goat "kept hitting the white one with its head" to make it walk backward. "It would take one step, two steps back, then stop," he says, and really, can you blame it? Would you want to walk backward on a beam that is about 8 inches wide and 100 feet above the ground? the owner of the goats said they were there 18 hours,  
then the maintenance department of the Pennsylvania Turnpike swung into action, using equipment that is normally used for inspecting the underside of bridges, pictures courtesy of Pennsylvania Turnpike, I wonder when returning home the rescuers were actually believed, I mean how often do you get to rescue a goat on a turnpike?


No comments: