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Do the cows get nervous too? Best answer wins 10 points

2007-03-08 13:51:09 · 10 answers · asked by Yafooey! 5 in Pets Cats

10 answers

absolutely. that is the cause of about 85% of all stampedes! lol

2007-03-08 14:42:07 · answer #1 · answered by kerri c 5 · 1 1

What the heck are you smoking????

Everyone knows that cows let the cats suck right off the teet in exchange for them keeping the mice out of the grain and hay. The mice are what they really hate. why, back on the farm, we always were having trouble with the cows stampeding, or they would get so scared that they would "dry up" for a few days. We knews it was them dagnabit mice. So we got some extra cats and pretty soon, those hefers were happier than a dog on a ..., uh,... another dog, yeah, happier than a dog on a dog, if ye know what I mean.

Why afterward you'd see a cow out in pasture with a cat hanging off a teet. You'd think it would hurt but those cows didn't seem to mind. The only problem we had after that was every once in a while when a cat got full of milk, if it didn't land just quite right when it dropped off, it got stepped on. Now most people don't seem to mind washing cow manure off the fresh vegetables they bought at the farmers market, but from the complaints, I guess cat guts are another story...

2007-03-08 15:06:48 · answer #2 · answered by hartsock1 3 · 0 0

This is not at all common and I will tell you why. Ask your average three year old where milk comes from - and they will say, the fridge, the carton etc. Your common cat, whilst very intelligent, would never be able to put two and two together that milk comes from a cow. As far as they are concerned, milk comes out of the cold box in the eating room... the same place their food comes from. If your cat is anything like mine, it never enters his head that his mini-beach in the bathroom magically cleans itself either - oh wait, I actually do think he knows that I clean it out, because he's usually standing there, with that look on his face like if I don't fill the sand up, he may have to use my sneakers instead, and then the moment the sand is down, he leaps into the box, even if I still have to pick it up and carry it to where it usually goes. I can never understand these people who say it has to be in a quiet place! :-)

2007-03-08 23:18:40 · answer #3 · answered by Karring Kat 3 · 0 0

Yes, this is very common and usually occurs in the early morning hours. Cats can smell fresh unpasteurized milk for miles, and will stalk in groups on unsuspecting cows. Cows are not hurt by theses attacks but could get sore teets. Your best bet is to wrap your cows teets with a scarf and lock the barn.

2007-03-08 18:43:56 · answer #4 · answered by Miss K J 1 · 0 0

No in fact back in the old days of milking by hand my dad used to squirt milk at the barn cats and they could get it pretty go, or at least lick it off their face. Its like the old myth that milk snakes milk cows for a meal in the pasture-ha no way

2007-03-09 03:38:24 · answer #5 · answered by dude_port 3 · 0 0

of course, thats what the scientist at purina found out. But even more shocking is that beef is a flavor of cat chow that they naturally crave, which goes to prove that when a cow dries up and is no longer any good to a cat they slay and devour the cow...Alien cow mutilaters???? I don't think so.

2007-03-08 15:27:35 · answer #6 · answered by Lori F 6 · 1 0

livestock incorporates the two women human beings(cows) and men(bulls). In a livestock herd there are various cows and extremely few bulls. One bull for each thirty cows. Cows have the udder and produces milk. Bulls have not any udder yet have a lengthy pendulous piece of pores and skin interior the ventral area of abdomen (prepuce) with penis interior.

2016-10-17 22:18:33 · answer #7 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Ah-ha! Now I know what cats are REALLY doing when they're outside at night. They're galavanting across the countryside, sneaking up on poor, unsuspecting cows! Hmm . . . wonder if they also dabbling in cow tipping . . .

2007-03-08 14:54:05 · answer #8 · answered by ladydi_1987 5 · 1 0

in my career i have never responded to a call of cats attacking cows!
but i'll be waiting!

2007-03-08 13:56:03 · answer #9 · answered by imadogcop 2 · 0 1

haha lols

2007-03-08 15:38:45 · answer #10 · answered by Chinky 4 · 0 0

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