Of mad writers and crazy cows…

Day 16 of NaNoWriMo

Have reached 30,000 words – half way through my target of 60,000 words for the month.

And in weird news from Malaysia:

A villager was savagely attacked from behind by a predator cow that almost ripped his hand off. He yelled, ‘Tiger, Tiger’ in panic before he realised what his assailant was. That’s right, a tame domestic cow. The poor fellow is still in hospital, with a savagely mangled hand.

A new variant of mad cow disease?


Comments

Of mad writers and crazy cows… — 6 Comments

  1. That was my first thought too, but I'm a farmer's daughter, brought up with cows. We had one really aggressive bad tempered animal I remember.

    A cow's defence is to lower its head and charge. Just like a bull in a bullring, in fact. (Bulls don't bite either.)

    I have a number of memories of racing across the field being chased by a cow with lowered head and two wicked looking horns aimed at my rear…but not bitten. Cows have teeth made for chewing grass, not ripping into enemies. In fact, I don't remember that they ever really hit us with their horns either. It was more bluff than anything.

  2. That's a bit like "I was attacked by 12 large men" when in reality it was one small guy with a knife.

    I do know cows can be a problem, but ripping off his arm?? A mad cow indeed.

  3. If the farmer was holding a block of cattle salt lick in his hand and the cow was in desperate need then it may have mangled his hand to get to the salt.

    I have never seen nor heard of a cow biting anything other than grass and fodder.

  4. Apparently he was in intensive care for a day or two. He says he was using a parang to cut back undergrowth on an oilpalm estate and the cow attacked him from behind. Cows often graze in and around oil palm and are normally welcome.

    I wonder if cows can get rabies from vampire bats? Hmmm.

Leave a Reply to glenda larke Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.