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GÄVLE GOAT

Sweden’s arson-afflicted Christmas goat is moving after 56 years 

The giant straw goat erected every year in the Swedish city of Gävle is moving away from the city's Slottstorget square to a new temporary location for the next three years to allow a new culture centre to be built. 

Sweden's arson-afflicted Christmas goat is moving after 56 years 
The Gävle Christmas goat before it burned down in 2021. Photo: Mats Åstrand/TT

The goat, called Gävlebocken, is famed around the world for the annual battle between anonymous arsonists who try to burn it down and the city authorities, who try to keep it intact until after Christmas. 

Over its 56-year-history, the arsonists have the advantage, with the goat burning down slightly more often than it has stayed intact.

After 2016, when it was burned down within hours of being inaugurated, however it remained intact until 2020, coming close to beating its four-year survival record. 

It burned down again just before Christmas last year, however, with a man with soot on his hands arrested near the scene of the crime. 

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The goat will over the next three years be erected on the nearby Rådhusesplanaden while a new cultural centre is built in the Slottstorget square. It will be protected in its new location by a double row of fences, in the hope of warding off pranksters. 

While it all seems like a bit of fun, it remains a crime to burn down the goat, as the American tourist Lawrence Jones discovered in 2001, when he was jailed for 18 days after he was apprehended, lighter in hand as he watched the goat burn. 

Jones told a court he had been misled by Swedish ‘friends’ who had insisted that torching the straw goat was a perfectly legal Swedish tradition.

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GÄVLE GOAT

Sweden’s Gävle goat is Christmas dinner for peckish birds

A flock of hungry jackdaws has begun eating the giant Christmas straw goat erected in Gävle, Sweden, raising the prospect of it getting severely damaged even if no one manages to set fire to it.

Sweden's Gävle goat is Christmas dinner for peckish birds

Gävle’s Christmas goat, Gävlebocken, has only survived until the New Year 19 times in the 57 years it has been erected in the city, with pranksters managing to set it on fire every other year.

But this year, apparently for the first time, birds are a bigger problem.

The extremely wet weather Sweden suffered in July and August have meant that an unusually large amount of grain has been left on the straw out of which the goat is made, which has now led to a flock of jackdaws pulling the goat apart, with straw tumbling to the ground as a result. 

READ ALSO: Gävle’s Christmas goat begins battle against the arsonists 

The jackdaws and falling straw have been observed on the web camera the municipality has set up for people who want to follow the goat live, which you can find on The Local’s Goatwatch page.

Anna-Karin Niemann, spokeperson for Gävle Municipality, told the Svenska Dagbladet newspaper that this was almost certainly the first time the goat had suffered from a similar corvid onslaught.  

“We have tried to look in the archive and have spoken to people who have worked for a long time in constructing the Gävlebocken,” she said. “But none of them remember this happening before.”

On Thursday, the city’s goat committee held an emergency meeting and decided to let the goat stand, despite the attacking birds and the risk that it will look increasingly threadbare as Christmas approaches. 

“It’s about that Christmas spirit, and the goat will continue to spead that Christmas spirit,” Niemann told SvD. “It doesn’t feel right to frighten away birds who are only following their natural instincts and want to have food.” 

READ ALSO: The weirdest attacks on Gävle’s Christmas goat

Niklas Aronsson, a communications officer at BirdLife Sverige told the Arbetarbladet newspaper that news of food tended to spread rapidly among jackdaws, which are among the world’s most intelligent birds. 

“Some say that they speak to one another but there’s no evidence for that,” he said. “All it takes is for a jackdaw flying over a town to see 40 other birds eating for them to know that there’s food there.” 

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