A Gift for Donkeys
Redwings Horse Sanctuary (www.redwings.org.uk)
Donkeys at Redwings Horse Sanctuary display the red socks that have been donated by Arsenal Football Club.
Redwings Horse Sanctuary in the United Kingdom (UK) provides love and care for more than 1,000 horses and donkeys. But even the kind sanctuary workers can’t keep flies from biting the animals.
“In the summer, flies take a fancy to our donkeys’ legs and can cause a lot of pain and scabs,” Jenny Herod of Redwings told the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).
Luckily, the donkeys are getting help from an unlikely place: a football (soccer) club. Arsenal Football Club, a legendary soccer team, is donating its players’ old socks to the sanctuary. The bright red socks have no “feet,” so it’s fairly easy to put them on donkeys’ legs. They protect the animals from flies and many other things.
“The socks are being used for anything from protecting our rescued residents’ sensitive legs from flies to holding their vet bandages in place,” Nicola Knight of Redwings told the Southwest News Service.
Redwings Horse Sanctuary (www.redwings.org.uk); Photo composite Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
(left) A donkey at Redwings Horse Sanctuary wears a mask and a pair of socks to keep the flies away. (right) Three donkeys display AFC socks.
The idea for the sock donation came from Michael Lloyd, who works for Arsenal. Football, the game that’s called soccer in the United States, can be rough. It doesn’t take long before a pair of socks are too worn out for a player to use them again. Rather than throw out old socks, Lloyd thought, why not donate them? Redwings gratefully accepted the offer.
It’s possible that one particular Arsenal player influenced Lloyd’s decision to donate the socks. Kai Havertz loves donkeys so much that his teammates call him “Donkey.” In 2023, he was thrilled when another donkey sanctuary named one of their animals after him.
“Donkeys are such incredible animals, and I am very happy to give my name so this little donkey can help raise awareness of the importance of good donkey welfare, here and all around the world,” Havertz told the BBC at the time.
Now, a lucky donkey may be wearing Havertz’s old socks.