Uninvited Thanksgiving guest crashes Thatcher backyard feast – And he brought his own horns

Contributed Photo/Courtesy Brent L. Quinn: A Thatcher family had an odd guest for Thanksgiving when a bighorn sheep wandered into their yard.

Staff Reports

THATCHER – While most in the Gila Valley were carving turkey and arguing over politics yesterday, one Thatcher family on 8th Avenue got the ultimate uninvited dinner guest: a massive Desert Bighorn ram who apparently mistook their backyard for the buffet line.

The drama began when the neighbors’ two bird dogs decided to audition for a role in a horror movie. Their howling reached decibels usually reserved for smoke alarms, which – instead of scaring off wildlife – apparently sounded like a dinner bell to a large, very curious bighorn sheep.

The dogs, suddenly realizing they had ordered à la carte from the wrong menu, went suspiciously quiet.

Contributed Photo/Courtesy Brent L. Quinn: The bighorn sheep hung out for a while and then headed off to another Thatcher residence.

Desert Bighorn sheep are typically found high in the rugged mountains of Greenlee County near Morenci, where Freeport-McMoRan and the Arizona Game and Fish Department (AZGFD) have spent years and millions of dollars transplanting, monitoring, and protecting one of the state’s most iconic – and stubborn – species. Seeing one casually window-shopping in a Thatcher subdivision is about as common as spotting a penguin at a Phoenix pool party.

Neighbors snapped photos while keeping a respectful distance. The sheep moseyed off after a while and has since been spotted in another Thatcher backyard.  

AZGFD reminds residents that if a bighorn does drop by unannounced, admire from afar, keep pets inside, and definitely do not try to offer it cranberry sauce – they’re on a strict mineral-lick-and-desert-forage diet.