Near-miss story – Maxwell’s Tweet

One man went walking with his dog. Next minute, he was running for his life.

One man went walking with his dog, and happened to enter a field of cows. Next minute, he was running for his life.

He captured the terrifying incident on his smart phone and, later, posted it on Twitter as a lesson to others.

“This happened at Pishiobury [near Welwyn Garden City]. I just cried and ran. My dog had to fend for himself. Literally the worst thing ever.”

Listen to it with the sound turned on.
Video on Twitter
Cattle attack, filmed on smartphone, posted to Twitter


Posted with the permission of @JMaxwell.

Cattle kill 6 a year in Northern Ireland

An experienced farmer describes how he was nearly gored.

Farmer Victor Chestnutt is deputy president of the Ulster Farmers’ Union and very aware of the need to handle cattle with caution. As part of Farm Safety Week, he described how he was nearly gored by one of his own cows a few years ago. Continue reading “Cattle kill 6 a year in Northern Ireland”

Do you know your cattle?

Three useful links to help you identify cattle after an attack.

When reporting a cattle incident, you may be asked to identify which breed was involved. If you don’t know your Aberdeen Angus from your Whitebred Shorthorn, here are some useful sites to help you decide.

10 Native British Cattle Breeds

A selection of the ten most common native breeds in the UK, from the excellent Countryfile team.

How to identify cattle after an attack
10 Native British Cattle Breeds: and how to recognise them.

Rare and Native Breeds Cattle

18 common and rare breeds found in the UK, supplied by the Rare Breeds Survival Trust (RBST) with links to further information on each one.

rare breeds of cattle - identify your cows and bulls 
Rare and Native Breeds Cattle

List of Cattle Breeds – Wikipedia

If you can’t find what you need above, Wikipedia lists 800 breeds of cattle, from around the world, including photographs of most of them.

wikipedia cattle index - to identify cows and bullsList of cattle breeds on Wikipedia

Don’t forget, you don’t need to be able to identify the breed before you report an incident to us, but it helps if you can.  Report an Incident here.

 


Featured photo credit: lydia harper

Near-miss Story – Ilse’s Tale

Ilse and her husband meet a bull on the narrow Pembrokeshire Coastal path.

I live in Belgium and was in Wales with my husband on a four-day hiking holiday along the famous Pembrokeshire Coastal Path. On the 13th July, 2017, we set off from Milford Haven, heading for a B&B in Dale. 

We were near St Ishmaels. There was just the two of us, and we didn’t have a dog. We had just passed some old bunkers, and the path was narrow with lots of shrubs. To the left was the cliff and the sea. To our right was a barbed wire fence and a meadow.

Suddenly we saw a bull. Behind him were several cows. They were right on the path. The bull was making a lot of noise.

 We were so frightened. Shaking like leaves.

 Luckily, there was a nearby gate, and we could escape through the gate and into the meadow. Safely on the other side of the fence, we took a photograph of the bull (see above).

 Suddenly, he turned around and went away, just as if he wanted to return back to the farm. Thinking it was safe, we left the meadow and started back along the path. To our horror, the bull and the cows returned. We were so scared, in shock, and almost paralysed by fear, but we managed to escape through the fence again.

Eventually the animals left. We were too frightened to go forwards, so we turned back and tried to make our way from there to St Ishmaels. We walked for miles and miles. Got lost. Eventually we had to catch a bus in order to get to our B&B in Dale.

 We weren’t injured, but we were very badly scared.

The strange thing about is that the bull and the cows were actually on the very narrow coastal path, and we had to escape into the meadow. It should have been the opposite way round!

 Suppose we had encountered the bull at another point, where the coast path then was even narrower, and where there was no fence to get safely behind? On our left side were cliffs. What would have happened?

 I didn’t report the problem at the time, but later I sent some pictures of the beautiful coast in Wales to http://www.pembrokeshirecoast.org.uk/ and I also sent the bull picture and our story of the bull in the neighbourhood of St Ishmael’s. I got an answer from a lady called Rebecca Evans, and she told me she will be meeting the farmer next week.

 As walkers, we know there is advice on how to walk across a large field with livestock, such as cows, bulls, ponies, etc. But being confronted by a bull and cows on a narrow path with no way out… what is the advice for that specific situation?


Featured Story – Anita’s Tale

Anita only survived because her dog raised the alarm.

I was 80 years old in September 2015, and very fit and active. I had planned to spend two weeks on a walking holiday in Northumbria with my daughter, Helen. We drove up from Lincolnshire, set up our camper van on the camp site, and decided to go for a walk.

We took our three dogs with us. I have a little Jack Russell. My daughter had a Border Collie (Meg) and a German Shepherd cross (Holly). Holly was a timid dog, frightened of cars, and little did we know that Holly was shortly going to save our lives.

We walked down a lane, crossed a busy road, and climbed over a high stile. The field was huge and seemed empty of livestock. In the distance was Hadrian’s Wall, and we thought it would be nice to follow the public footpath towards it.

Some way across the large field, we came upon a herd of black limousin cows and their brown-coloured calves. There were probably about 30 cows. They came towards us, bellowing and mooing loudly, making a terrible racket.

We dropped the leads so the dogs could run off. I can remember them hurtling past us and away from the cows. By this time we were a very long way from the stile, and along the side of the field was a barbed wire fence that I couldn’t climb over.

I caught my foot in a rut on the path and fell over, hitting my head. What happened next is a little vague, but I think the cows must have rolled me over, kicking my legs, because later I discovered my legs were covered in bruises.

I remember calling out to my daughter, Helen. I didn’t realise that one of the cows had tossed Helen and thrown her to the ground. Bravely, she picked herself up and came to help me. I was bleeding from my head. Blood everywhere.

Luckily, nearby, there was a feeder for calves. It was a big structure with bars that were wide enough for calves to get through, but not wide enough for cows. I couldn’t walk on my own. Helen dragged me over to the feeder and we crawled underneath it.

The cows surrounded the feeder, pushing their noses through the bars as if trying to get to us. They continued making a noise. We couldn’t stand up, just stayed crouching and sitting under the feeder, surrounded by cows.

This went on for over an hour. It was terrifying.

We later learnt what happened to the dogs. Meg (the Border Collie) got her lead caught on the stile on the way out of the field. Holly (the timid German Shepherd cross) somehow managed to cross the busy road and return to the campsite, where she raised the alarm by barking. People followed her, rescued Meg, and then realised there was a problem in the field with the cows.

The police arrived and a medic in a car. It took some effort on their part to shoo the cows away. I remember most of the cows eventually wandered off, but there was one cow who seemed to be the matriarch and was particularly aggressive. She was making the most noise. After a while, she gave up trying to attack us and followed the other cows up the field.

The medic had to crawl under the feeder to treat me. I had the cut on my head, but also had pins and needles in my arms. I thought the pins and needles were simply due to shock, but the medic put a collar around my neck.

I couldn’t get out from under the feeder, so people had to physically lift up the structure and move it, a few inches at a time, until I was free. I was placed on a stretcher and a helicopter arrived – an air ambulance. I remember the medics had to cut my clothes off and I was worried about getting cold.

The air ambulance took me to Newcastle Infirmary.

I have only vague memories of the next few days. Apparently they discovered I had a vertebral dislocation in my neck (between C5 and C6) and that was the cause of the pins and needles. By this stage, I couldn’t move my left arm. I was on traction for 4 days to try to remove the pressure on the nerves at the place where my neck was dislocated. The doctors needed to operate and told my children I could possibly become quadriplegic, and I might even die.

Luckily the operation was a success. I survived.

I was in Newcastle Infirmary for over five weeks. Because of the problem with my arms, I couldn’t look after myself and my daughter had to visit every day to look after me while I was in the hospital. She was still staying in the camper van, with three dogs to look after, and had to take time off work to do this.

I discovered there was going to be a long wait for neuro-rehabilitation in Newcastle, so I got myself home, and later was admitted to Pinderfields Hospital in Wakefield for specialist rehabilitation. I stayed there during the week and went home at weekends. I was there for another 5 weeks.

My household insurance paid for a neuro-physiotherapist to continue treating me at home. This treatment continued for over a year, and I had my last session a few weeks ago.

It’s nearly 2 years since the injury. I still can’t use my left arm or my left hand properly. It feels like I’m wearing a thick rubber glove on my hand. My right hand is much better, but I continue to feel pins and needles. I drop things and am clumsy. Before this happened, I enjoyed sewing, knitting and card making. I also played the clarinet and was planning on learning to play the piano. Now I can’t do any of those things.

As I often say, I now lack “nimblitude”.

I prefer to eat with my fingers (when nobody else is around!) because I have difficulty using cutlery. I cut up meat with a pair of scissors, so that I can eat it one-handed. I have to carry things – like milk bottles – clasped to my chest, because I don’t have the strength to carry them in my hand.

Luckily I can walk and get around. I used to ride a bicycle, but can’t manage to balance because of my weak left arm, so I use a motorised tricycle instead. I must be a nuisance at traffic lights, because I take so long to get going.

Sometime after I returned home, I was contacted by a solicitor from Bristol and we are suing the farmer for damages. The farmer has admitted he did not make any effort to keep his cows with their calves away from the footpath. The case comes to court in September. If I win, I intend to give some money back to the air ambulance service.

Sadly, my daughter’s dog, the timid German Shepherd cross, Holly, is now slowly dying from cancer. We still can’t believe the dog managed to raise the alarm and save our lives. Without her, I truly believe we wouldn’t have survived.

5 ways for walkers to report a problem with cattle

Walkers, don’t shrug off nasty incidents with cattle. Report them.

If you’ve ever been hiking in the British countryside, you’ve probably had a brush with cattle at some time in your life. You might have had to abandon a walk because there was a bull in the field. You might have had to run to escape a group of cows. You might even have been injured.

When the danger is over, it’s tempting to shrug off the event. “These things happen.” We strongly urge you not to dismiss these incidents, even the minor ones. By telling your stories, and raising awareness of the problem, we can bring about change.

Here are 5 ways you can make a report. Continue reading “5 ways for walkers to report a problem with cattle”

Domain names purchased

What’s in a name?

OK. What do you call a site about cattle who attack walkers on public footpaths in England and Wales? A site that’s trying to be sensible and mature, responsible and measured, rational and restrained…

Killer Cows, of course.

Forget sensible, mature, restrained, etc. Let’s go for punchy and memorable!

Couldn’t decide which, so I bought them both:

  • killercows.co.uk
  • killercattle.co.uk

Featured Story – Libby’s Tale

Libby, the “cow whisperer”, was lucky to escape with her life.

Libby’s Tale

I am a farmer’s daughter and my father had shown me how to walk safely through fields of livestock, to ensure we didn’t frighten or startle them, not to get between a mother and its young, to walk around the herd not straight through, to ensure that dogs are properly trained not to worry livestock and that all gates are securely closed.

When we joined a local walking group I was known as the “cow whisperer”, whenever we encountered fields of cattle I would guide the other nervous walkers around safely and when we were approached by curious bullocks or headstrong colts I would put my arms out (to increase my size as the stock looked at me) and say “back” in a deep firm voice – this worked beautifully and the cattle or horses would retreat. On some of these walks we were joined by walkers with dogs and we met no problems.

When we were asked to house and dog sit for a cousin in Herefordshire we looked forward to visiting the beautiful section of the much hailed Offa’s Dyke National Walking Trail. We had a few days getting used to the dog and him getting used to us, then we set off together. We started off across open fields and were treated to wonderful views when we got to the top of the hill and the dog was well behaved. We came to a field containing cattle, they were a mixed herd that I did not recognise, but I knew there were older calves and a bull in the field. We assessed the situation at the field gate and reasoned that it was a national trail, so the cattle should be used to walkers and their dogs, we could see the stile at the other side, it wasn’t far and it wasn’t surrounded by cattle, so we went through. We got halfway across, I was in front, my husband was behind me with the dog on a short lead and suddenly I was surrounded by a group of cows, they had fenced me off from my husband and the dog – and they were looking at me! I did what I normally did – arms out, deep calm voice – but they charged at me, one headbutted me to the ground, I struggled up and they knocked me down time after time. I could hear my husband shouting, but couldn’t see him. I knew my face was badly damaged and I was feeling dizzy and eventually I lay on the ground, looking up at several cattle all intent on trampling me – I rolled into a ball and thought “that’s it; I’m not going to survive this.” I passed out.

My husband had tried to get to me, but the cows kept butting him away and then turned back to trample me, the cattle did not seem interested in my husband or the dog and luckily my husband did not let the dog off the lead as it would have run away. When the dog realised I was down its training sprang into play (it was brought up on a cattle farm and was trained in rounding up cattle) it started to nip at the heels of the cattle and began to drive them away so my husband could get to me. He thought I was dead, he’d seen cattle trampling all over me. My husband lifted me up and with the aid of the dog keeping the cattle at bay behind him (they were pushing him in his back all the time) he got me to the stile and somehow carried me over it; I do not know how he did that! Once we were on the other side the cattle were threatening to push through the fence to get to us, so he kept walking through another field. I came around and couldn’t remember the attack – I thought we’d had a car accident, I was walking with wobbly legs and wanted to sit down and my husband was desperately walking and trying to get a phone signal. Finally he got through and rang 999 and the air ambulance was summoned. I lay on the grass and watched the helicopter arrive thinking – this isn’t real – I’ll wake up in a bit and all will be well.

I was airlifted to hospital where I was treated for multiple broken ribs, a collapsed lung and bleeding in both sides of the chest, these injuries required bilateral chest drains to be inserted. I also suffered a broken jaw and several of my teeth were loose. I had split top and bottom lips and extensive bruising all over my body. The doctors in resus wanted me to go to ITU, but there wasn’t a bed free, I needed maxillo-facial team assessment, but they were in another hospital and I wasn’t well enough to be moved. I spent 10 days in hospital, and then was discharged home where it took a long time for us both to be well enough to walk again. I required counselling for PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder), multiple physio and osteopath appointments and extensive dentistry to remove 3 teeth and get my mouth fit for purpose again. My husband also suffered PTSD and hurt his back, as a result of that attack.

This happened 3 years ago and I still bear the scars on my face, I have deep bruising on my thighs and left upper arm that still pain me and several of my teeth feel a little painful if I jiggle them, but I am lucky – I am a survivor and I do not want anyone else to go through what we have gone through. We found out that the herd that attacked us were a mix of Limousin, Simmental and Charolais breeds – there are other stories of attacks by these breeds, but we don’t know if this was the main factor. It may be that they had a bad experience with a previous dog walker – we don’t know, but please tell everyone – cattle are not predictable and they certainly cannot be considered to be safe.