 So we'll go in the paddock with them. Would you like a handful as well? Hey. So these guys are into the paddock. Okay, here we go. What's up guys? Oh my Lord! Oh my Lord! Oh God! Look, look, look over here! Look at this one! Look at his little fluffy neck! There you go. Oh dear, you already had one. Here, come here, come here. Oh dear Lord! Everyone loves their breakfast. Breakfast. See that? Well, this one's playing like rugby. There you go. All gone now. All gone. See? I have nothing left. Hello. Has a little fluffy. All belongs on sheep, not on humans. So like, let's just explain. You give the sheep a haircut when they need it to prevent their fly strike and you might have to trim a little bit of their hair off for the sheep's best interest, don't you? Yeah, so they want them. Whereas the more merino breeds, which are typically bred for wool production, so like, Peter up the back there, he's a lot wrinklier, he's got a lot more folds of skin, so he's been bred that way to hold more wool. You shear them because they need a haircut because it's good for them. You know, we don't shear them to sell their wool like this. The industry doesn't use this excuse that they need a haircut, you know, but they... And it's because of how people, how humans have changed them over time. That they produce this wool, don't they? Yeah, yeah. Human beings created the problem of the wool on the sheep through selective breeding and, yeah, they should just be looked after, not used for their wool and killed. That's a walking bit. This one's for the pool room. Ah, thanks guys! Who are these two? Okay, you're Morgan Freeman. Hello. Morgan Free Sheep. Do you get cuckaburras out here? More in the bush line area. Yeah, you can hear them? Yeah. Cuckaburras sound like this. Yeah, similar to a monkey. Clipping into cuckaburra now. And where are we going now? This is Goat Mountain. Goat Mountain? Goat Mountain, like, not Mount Rushmore, Mount Goatmore. Oh dear. Here they come. The goats rush in. Humans actually named their beards after the goat. The goatee. Hello guys, am I allowed to crouch down? Yeah, this is Bro and Amigo. Hello guys, how are you? Oh, hey, how well? Hello Amigo. Amigo. Hello Amigo. Hey dear. How are you? How are you? Good, nice to meet you. I'm in every area for the animals. Yeah. They've got something exciting to do when they wake up in the morning. They've got all rocks over there, like a big pile of rocks to climb on. Okay. And the tyres. Yeah. And then we've got the trampoline. They've got a trampoline. Yep, and they've got a big goat jungle gym up the back as well. A jungle gym. Yep, the other paddock. And they can climb up to the top of Goat Mountain too. Wow. Would you like to walk up the top? Let's go hang out on Goat Mountain. Hey, how are you going, mate? Look at his horns. Wow. So this is Goat Mountain. Check it out. You guys want to come up? Come on. Come up, Goat Mountain. Come on. Come on, guys. Me. Hello. This is where they have the deck party up here. This is a goat's lie. Who's looking at me? Who's this guy on the trampoline? He's not a goat. This time I've seen a goat trampoline. A trampoline? There we go. Oh my God. Oh my God. Oh my God. No, no. He's eating. Quick place. Oh, dear Lord, have mercy on everyone. This is the most adorable thing ever. Oh my God. We're honored to have you here. Thank you so much. Yeah. So we're just talking about how the sanctuary started. Edgar. With a pig. Yeah. He wandered into my home and look what happened. How did you find Edgar? We got him for a photo shoot raising awareness about our flawed animal protection laws where the code of practice has been reviewed in Australia. Okay. Yeah. So we needed a pig for a photo shoot. Oh, wow. And I got the pig before the photo shoot. And I'm going the day before and he was covering in poo and cleaned him up and did the photo shoot. And the photo shoot went really well with James Cromwell. And James had this idea. He said, look, why don't I march up the steps of parliament house for the pig and we'll demand a better deal for the pig. He said, yeah, it's a really good idea. Oh my gosh. Now I've really got to teach the pig to walk on a lead and be very humanised because he wasn't. And I just went down to my local parking film wall with my little dog and my little pig. And people just came from everywhere. Like I was blown away when they saw Edgar on a lead. He's so friendly. He's so clean. He's better than my boyfriend. Yeah. Just actually watching the connections with people and Edgar. Edgar just spoke to their heart. Yeah. So I said I'm going to start sanctuary. Yeah. It's just not enough to save one animal. It's like the knock on effect of having the sanctuary and educating people and getting them to meet the animals in influences and to make different choices. Yeah. We can tell people what to do and they might do it. They might not do it. We've got no authority to do it. No guarantee they do it. When people actually believe that change themselves and they feel it in their heart. Yeah. You'll live it no matter how hard it is. And when you meet animals and they're purest of form. Yeah. It really gets to you here. Yeah. I see it with people come to the sanctuary. I see the birds and the pigs. The pigs really get people. Like, you know, people think that they're dirty and everything. And they're so clean. I know. But it's just beautiful to people to meet the animals to hear the story about Clarabel the calf, the cow that, you know, hid her calf in the forest. Yeah. People can tell you that. But we actually witnessed it and that blew us away that story about her hiding that calf from us who we were the good guys. But she didn't know that. We look the same. Yeah. We look the same. And I think that's the most powerful story because people always think, you know, dairy is so, you know, if you call it kind and good. And the tragedy is those calves and even the mamas, like, you know, I rescued Clarabel because I always wanted to dig a forest on the mothers. Now we know about the bobby calves. Yeah. A very, you see these little doe-eyed babies and they really get you here. Yeah. But the mama cows who continually have their babies taken away away and away. We forget about them so we rescued her and she was being sent to slaughter and she was pregnant. Pregnant, yeah. The first time in her life she got to keep her baby. Amazing. And that's just awesome. And now she's calm. She knows the baby's not going anywhere. And we had the parliamentary inquiry into the animal active in Victoria. And they came out here and the lead chairman of that committee, you know, when he went down and I was telling Clarabel, so he said, come on, I've got to go. He couldn't draw the tears to actually just to see it. To see it. We don't see what happens to these animals. No. Yeah. It's just beautiful every day. You look around here and these lovely animals just chilling. Yeah. She's my co-wandering boss or something and cheeky money. I'll show you cheeky money. Okay. She was just here. Ruby and Monique, see. Two sentient animals that want to live and want to desire freedom and happiness and here they are together. I love having their bellies rubbed. I love both. I love having their bellies rubbed. It's a really beautiful place you have here, Pam. Thank you. I've never been here. It's amazing. It just fills me with joy being here. So good. What people might not realize watching is that these places, they are very expensive to run and you'd have to rally in people's support for donations to feed all these animals. People often come here and they go, how is this funded? And this is actually funded by donations. People who believe in our work, that absolutely blows me away. When I started the sanctuary and I funded it all myself for many years and then we started to grow and I used to, I still feel very humbled when people give me money but they say, no Pam, thank you because you're doing what we can't do and that's actually really lovely that people want to have a sanctuary for rescued animals but they don't have the opportunity or the means to do it whereas we work together. It's beautiful. Yeah, only because of donations and the goodness of the human heart. So if anyone out there wants to help out Pam and Edgar's mission here and they want to do something for animals they don't know what and you might be a working parent, you might not have time to go out and do your own activism. What you can do is donate to Edgar's mission and we'll leave a link down below that you can do that right now and help out feeding the pigs and the maintenance and all the different things the animals need and yeah, thank you so much everyone. Thank you so much Pam for all your work. Some people don't have money and that's understandable we're all poor at the moment but yeah, lucky in sharing our posts is wonderful as well. As well, yeah, just to create awareness. Or at least they could go the other way and put us out of business by stop having animals in these farm situations. We're probably the only organizations that's working towards obsolescence. Yeah, well, all the meat and dairy eaters out there sanctuary is to rescue that these animals are being rescued from the industry that you guys are supporting so Thank you. When pigs meet one another they go this deeper and you go into the shed and you're walking down the beach they're actually saying hello to the very species that's incarcerating they're still saying hello to us and one of the things I see with pigs that's really interesting they capacity to forgive we have these pigs that come from factories they're in a horrible setting and they'll be frightened and they'll be scared and then they turn around to these willing, engaging, happy beings it's just amazing we humans, we carry these grudges and all the stupid things we go over the pigs, they are so intelligent Yeah, more forgiving They are so intelligent and I think not that we should value things because of their intelligence because a hell of a lot of humans are going to be in trouble they're going to get compounds of suffering of what we're doing to get animals and it's really an indictment on us that we can do so much better We can We can