A young girl is taking a stand against PETA's most recent anti-wool campaign by posting a photo of herself in a shearing shed.

She shared the photo on Facebook next to the the animal rights group's disturbing image of a naked model and bloodied sheep.

Danni Johnson, 29, grew up on a 45,000 acre property in Nyngan, near Dubbo in central west NSW.

Her father is a shearer and her brother and sister are farmers.

She told Daily Mail Australia she has worked in ‘thousands’ of sheds and never seen the abuse outlined in PETA’s campaign.

Danni Johnson, 29 from Nyngan, NSW is taking a stand against PETA's recent anti-wool campaign by sharing a photo of a real shearing shed on social media

She says she wants people in the city to realise how sheep are really treated, and invites those concerned to the country to watch shearers at work

‘In my honest opinion I think PETA has paid someone to create these images of shearers abusing sheep.

‘I am 29 years old, have grown up in the industry and have never ever seen someone do that.’

The campaign video shows men throwing sheep against timber floors, and bashing them with their tools and fists.

‘I just don’t believe it would happen, in country towns people talk and if shearers did that they wouldn’t be able to get any work,’ she said.

‘Obviously sheep make movement when they’re being shawn but shearers rarely cut them, I have cut my legs worse shaving then I have cut a sheep shearing.’

The young woman's post went viral in a matter of days, she says she has cut herself shaving worse than she has cut a sheep shearing

The young woman says the wool industry runs in her veins, and she has never seen animals harmed in the way PETA's campaign shows

PETA spokeswoman, Claire Fryer, says the video was taken as part of an investigation into the wool industry and says it includes 'footage of 235 incidents recorded in Victoria alone and more than 40 pages of formal legal complaints – which investigators documented at shearing sheds visited at random.'

' The industry will say whatever they can to draw attention away from the punching, kicking, cutting and other abuses endured by sheep used for wool,' Ms Fryer said.

'We are confident that, after watching the undercover footage, consumers will make the right decision.'

But Ms Johnson says shearers don’t harm the sheep because it isn’t profitable for them to do so.

‘If they hurt the sheep they’re responsible for stitching them back up, which takes time.

The young woman (pictured left) says she has helped work sheep since she was a child

She says she still goes home during peak shearing times to help her family on the property

‘They get paid per sheep so they can’t afford to spend that extra time fixing up a badly shawn sheep.’

But Peta says the way shearers are paid doesn't protect the animals.

'Shearers are paid by yield instead of by the hour, encouraging careless work and leaving little consideration for the animal’s welfare,' Ms Fryer said.

Ms Johnson was shocked by how many people her Facebook Post actually reached.

‘I had it on private at first, but then I realised how many of my friends had shared it, I changed it to public and within a few hours it had been shared more than 500 times.’

So far it has had more than 2000 shares and 7000 likes.

‘I just want city people to realise this is not a reflection of shearing sheds in Australia.

‘People who are worried about this kind of thing should come and visit a country town, ask at a pub for a shearer, and to see a shed.

‘Country people are kind and compassionate and care about their animals, the whole point to farming is reproducing so when this video says shearing kills it doesn’t even make sense to me because that defeats the whole purpose of farming.’

The naked truth campaign 'hit close to home' for Ms Johnson who grew up in shearing sheds alongside her father - a veteran shearer of 37 years

A model in PETA's last campaign poster posted this image of a shearer stitching a poorly shawn sheep

A previous anti-wool campaign by PETA showed a similar sheep

The fake sheep being made-up for the campaign shoot and video

She took the anti-sheep campaign personally.

‘This campaign was a little bit close to home,’ she said.

‘It is my life, and it effects everyone in my life.’

‘My grandfather, was a farmer and shearer – I have childhood memories of working in the sheds, at shearing time we would take a week off school for mustering and helping in the yards.’

Ms Johnson's father, who has been shearing for 37 years, since leaving school taught her how to shear.

‘There is a photo of me when I was eight-years-old with my dad in the shed, he was holding a hand piece and showing me how it worked.

‘I wanted to be a shearer just like him.’

The young woman says shearing sheep protects them from harm.

'It is animal abuse not to shear a sheep, it causes health problems,' she said.

But PETA put that down to genetic modification.

'In their natural climate, sheep who have not been bred specifically for an overburden of wool will only produce enough to protect themselves from the elements. If sheep, who are not native to Australia, were not being bred and exploited for their wool, there would be no need to shear them.'