In early May the UK Prime Minister, Tony Blair, said the foot-and-mouth epidemic was being brought under control.
Four months on, though, the epidemic has reached a milestone - its two-thousandth case.
Mr Blair's home straight is proving a long and winding road, with no end yet in sight.
Disputed policy
Government scientists now say the outbreak could last at least until the New Year. One epidemiologist says it is unsafe to give any date for it to end.
Some argue that vaccination should completely replace the policy of slaughtering all infected and suspect animals, though more say it should be used to supplement the slaughter policy.
The government's chief scientific adviser, Professor David King, heads an interdepartmental scientific committee on foot-and-mouth.
Vaccine problems
It is reported to have been "drawing up secret plans to vaccinate animals" to try to stop a fresh outbreak when sheep are shortly moved down from the hills to lowland farms for the winter.
A spokesman for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) told BBC News Online the reports were "misleading".
He said: "Vaccination was always an option, and it remains an option. It is being considered, but no more urgently than at any earlier stage."
Dr Tony Wilsmore, of the department of agriculture at the University of Reading, told BBC News Online he thought the government's mass slaughter policy, though unpopular, was right.
'Pretty horrific'
He said: "If there were a good vaccine, then I'd say go for it by all means. But the vaccine that's available isn't all that good.
"It doesn't necessarily stop animals being infected: it stops them showing symptoms of infection. And vaccinated animals can still excrete the virus.
"In Saudi Arabia they have very large dairy herds, which they vaccinate against foot-and-mouth as often as every 70 days. And they still get breakdowns.
"The humane aspects of the slaughter policy are pretty horrific. But if you want to restore the export trade, that's the quickest route."
Reluctant support
The Conservative agriculture spokesman, Tim Yeo MP, has often criticised government handling of the disease. But he too doubts that vaccination could help much.
Mr Yeo told BBC News Online: "I am a de facto reluctant supporter of the government's slaughter policy.
"A lot of the problem with stamping out the disease was caused by its slow initial reaction. That let the virus spread much further than it should have done in those early weeks.
"But there's a lot of confusion in people's minds about what vaccination could actually achieve.
"I know the export trade we want to resume is worth much less than the rest of the rural economy, which has been so badly damaged. But the only way to save the countryside is to end foot-and-mouth.
"Mass slaughter is the right policy. It just wasn't pursued properly. But now we've started on it, we must go on till the battle is won."
Spread by people
David Tyson, the president of the British Veterinary Association (BVA), told BBC News Online: "Our thinking hasn't changed.
"We haven't found a scenario where vaccination would help to speed the end of the outbreak.
"The Dutch used it, but that was because they couldn't dispose of the carcasses fast enough. It was a way of managing the slaughter, not the disease.
"I think what we're seeing is the tail of the outbreak, and it's being prolonged not by movements of animals, but of people."