Sheep Worrying by Dogs: Why Education, Responsibility, and Regulation Matter More Than Ever: NSA 2026 Survey

Sheep worrying by dogs remains one of the most serious, distressing, and preventable animal-welfare issues facing the UK countryside today. Each year, farmers across England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland experience the devastating consequences of dogs chasing, harassing, or physically attacking sheep, often with fatal outcomes for the animals involved and profound emotional and financial impacts for those who care for them.

As part of its ongoing work to address this issue, the National Sheep Association (NSA) has launched its 13th annual sheep worrying survey, marking an important development: for the first time, the survey is aimed directly at dog owners.

This shift recognises a crucial truth, meaningful change cannot happen through enforcement alone. It requires education, accountability, and cooperation between farmers, dog owners, trainers, welfare organisations, and policymakers.

What Is Sheep Worrying, and Why Is It So Serious?

Sheep worrying occurs when a dog, whether intentionally or unintentionally, chases, stalks, harasses, or attacks sheep. Crucially, physical injury is not required for serious harm to occur.

The consequences can include:

  • Miscarriage or premature labour in pregnant ewes

  • Mismothering, where stressed ewes abandon lambs

  • Severe injuries such as bites, torn flesh, and broken limbs

  • Fatal stress responses, even without direct contact

  • Death of sheep or lambs, sometimes entire groups

From a welfare perspective, sheep worrying is not a “minor incident” or an unfortunate accident, it is a significant animal-welfare crisis. From a farming perspective, it represents lost livestock, emotional distress, and financial damage that is rarely fully recoverable.

Thirteen Years of Evidence, and a Growing Need for Dog Owner Engagement

For over a decade, the NSA has collected data on sheep worrying incidents across the UK. These surveys have consistently shown that:

  • Incidents are widespread and underreported

  • Many attacks involve well-loved family dogs, not “dangerous” animals

  • A large proportion occur when dogs are off lead or poorly managed

  • Owners often underestimate the risk, believing their dog would “never chase”

By directly inviting dog owners to take part in the 2025 survey, the NSA is taking a vital step toward shared responsibility. Understanding attitudes, behaviours, misconceptions, and gaps in knowledge among dog owners is essential if prevention strategies are to be effective rather than purely reactive.

The survey is open from Monday 12th January until Monday 9th March, and dog owners across the UK are strongly encouraged to participate.

Timing Matters: Lambing Season and Increased Risk

The survey’s timing is no coincidence. Each spring, many UK sheep farmers enter lambing season, when ewes are either heavily pregnant or caring for young, highly vulnerable lambs.

During this period:

  • Stress levels have a far greater impact on welfare outcomes

  • The risk of miscarriage and mismothering increases significantly

  • Even a brief chase can result in long-term suffering or death

Survey findings are released each spring and shared with stakeholders, including the national press, helping to raise awareness at the exact time when vigilance from dog owners is most critical.

Why This Matters to NAPET and the Dog-Training Community

At NAPET (National Association for Professional E-collar Training), we believe sheep worrying highlights a broader issue: the gap between dog ownership, real-world responsibility, and effective education.

Preventing sheep worrying is not about demonising dogs or owners, it is about:

  • Reliable recall and control, especially in high-distraction environments

  • Understanding prey drive and chase behaviour, which exists even in friendly dogs

  • Using appropriate tools, training, and management, tailored to the individual dog

  • Clear legal and ethical accountability for handlers

Education-led regulation, professional standards, and honest conversations about risk are essential if we are serious about protecting livestock, safeguarding dogs from legal consequences, and preserving access to the countryside for everyone.

A Call to Action: Take Part, Share, and Learn

NSA Chief Executive Phil Stocker has highlighted the gravity of the issue, noting that sheep worrying causes not only immense animal suffering but also stress, anxiety, and financial loss for farmers across the UK.

By completing the survey and sharing it within your networks, dog owners and professionals alike can help:

  • Build a more accurate national picture of the problem

  • Inform education campaigns and guidance

  • Support proportionate, evidence-based policy decisions

  • Reduce preventable harm to livestock and dogs

Survey results also inform discussions among those responsible for legislation, enforcement, and countryside access, making participation genuinely impactful.

Learn More and Get Involved

  • Complete the NSA sheep worrying survey (open until 9th March)

  • Follow updates when results are released in spring

  • If you work in media or advocacy, you can register interest in the NSA press launch of the findings

  • Access educational resources and further information at www.sheepworrying.org.uk, 2026 survey

Sheep worrying is preventable. Through better education, responsible ownership, professional training standards, and cooperation between rural and urban communities, we can reduce harm, protect welfare, and ensure dogs and livestock can safely coexist in the UK countryside.

Outcomes over optics. Welfare over ideology. Responsibility over assumption.

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Lambing Season, Sheep Worrying, and Why Real Control Matters

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