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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Belgium
    Posts
    127

    Unhappy Horrible ride today (this is long - and graphic)

    My apologies to any Belgians who may be on this board (in advance) - I left for my ride today - went down our road and stopped because my brake had somehow beeen disconnected - we live in the middle of farmland on the edge of the Ardennes region and we are surrounded by wheatfields and cows. I have ranted to my husband on numerous occasions about the way the people around here treat their animals. In my opinion it's criminal. I have been known to feed "our" cows celery and crackers and toss the mowed grass over the fence for them and talk to them. So I was stopped on my bike and I turned around to talk to the cows and I saw this poor cow with her ear just covered in blood... and her eye - in fact I wasn't even sure she still had an eye it was so mangled ... and the whole upper half of her body was tinged pink. It was as though blood was oozing out her pores. I've never seen anything like it and I hope never to again. How could anybody allow anything to suffer like that. I told my husband just this morning that as much as I love it out here we need to move - I won't be able to make it through another summer out here. I get so upset about this because I just can't understand how nobody can care about these cows. I don't like having the cows in our field because of the flies - but I watch over them while they're here and I still throw grass over the fence whenever I mow the yard and if they get injured I keep a close eye out for them because nobody else will. This will haunt me for a long time. Sorry this was so long. Thanx for giving me a place to get this out.

    Pat

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Illinois
    Posts
    3,151
    Awful... but if you move the cows will still be there... and there won't be anybody to throw grass to 'em...

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Ohio
    Posts
    2,824
    How dreadful. It is nice to know you are doing what you can to help the cows.
    Jennifer

    “Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.”
    -Mahatma Gandhi

    "We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, therefore, is not an act but a habit."
    -Aristotle

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Belgium
    Posts
    127
    Geonz - yeah - there is that whole grass thing.

    I know it probably seems silly to be upset about this but I'm such a wuss about this kind of stuff. I do appreciate your replies. Thanx to both of you

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    North Central Florida
    Posts
    3,387
    Maybe the farmer doesn't know! Is there a way to contact him? Drive up to the house? Cows can be worth thousands of dollars. The cows across the street from me are valued in the tens of thousands, each. Hopefully it just happened, and he doesn't know, and she's probably been rubbing it to get flys off, etc, so it looks bad...

    Nanci
    ***********
    "...I'm like the cycling version of the guy in Flowers for Algernon." Mike Magnuson

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Posts
    268
    Did someone sabbotage your bike?!

    What are the animal rights / protection laws in your area? That would break my heart - so good of you to toss the grass over the fence. Stay strong & do what you can *hug*

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Middle Earth
    Posts
    3,997
    Hey, Bicyclette, as a partner in a sheep and cattle farm, and having been faring for 20 years, be really careful about giving cattle lawn clippings

    If you give it to them straight away and they eat it straight away, fine.

    But even left around for an hour or so on a warm day, the clippings start to heat up and ferment - on a hot day the process is even quicker. The cows will develop a form of bloat and may die.

    Just be cautious in when you share your clippings.

    Also - Had that injury been there for days? Our cattle have horns and sometimes injure each other unintetionally... and we don't always notice immmediately (With 300 cattle and a big ammount of land, its difficult). Did you inform the farmer/land-owner?

    Good on you for keeping an eye out for the animals - some farmers are too careless in their attitudes to animal welfare.


    Courage does not always roar. Sometimes, it is the quiet voice at the end of the day saying,
    "I will try again tomorrow".


  8. #8
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    North Central Florida
    Posts
    3,387
    As long as the clippings are spread out thinnly, they should be fine. Hey, cows can't founder like horses, can they, when they get into green grass after not having been on it? (Don't think so.) (Reminds me of this patient of mine, the one who told me how they do c-sections on cows [standing up] who said God made horses first, and worked out all his mistakes before making cows.)
    ***********
    "...I'm like the cycling version of the guy in Flowers for Algernon." Mike Magnuson

 

 

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