I made a call to find out whether the cow had been purposely removed only to be informed that no one had come to take the cow away. I then deduced that the cow had probably not been rustled as most of the other farms around here already have plenty of their own cows and wouldn't need to come and steal this one which left the only other option----the cow had gotten out and wandered off. OH NO! I have no idea how to: a) find a lost cow; b) get it back. Unfortunately I am not fond of westerns so haven't learned any useful knowledge about cow retrieval by reading those novels.
Luckily, following my phone call alerting them, the family sent two relatives to find the cow, which they did - it was in the woods happily eating whatever cows eat in the woods. The two of them managed to chase it back to the enclosure where I waited with the gate open so the cow could be chased back in. Who knew that you only had to chase the cow? Of course it did take two of them on either side of the cow as it wanted to wander left or right while being chased rather than be directed back to the proper cow living abode. I secured the gate behind the cow happy to see it returned with the knowledge that I would not have to encounter any more cow leavings in the yard. An inspection of the fence showed a place where the cow managed to knock a part down and get out. This was repaired and now the cows seem to be staying where they belong. Thank goodness. I don't mind doing the detecting but am not sure I can cow chase worth a damn.
Not sure why, but this post gets more 'hits' than any other. If you wandered over here to read this, please let me know where you came from. It would be interesting to see why folks like this one so much!
ReplyDeleteWander Woman