This is topic Cows are loud in forum Books, Films, Food and Culture at Hatrack River Forum.


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Posted by quidscribis (Member # 5124) on :
 
When cows go wandering past our house, they frequently Moo! very loudly. Some are quiet, and just go sauntering past as they nibble on the vegetation or garbage at the side of the road. Others Moo! and Moo! and Moo! like there's no tomorrow.

The cows wandering past today are loud.

Yep. Welcome to Sri Lanka. [ROFL]
 
Posted by Elizabeth (Member # 5218) on :
 
Peepers are loud. I mean LOUD. There is a small swamp is our back yard, and when i am talking on the phone in the house, people say they hear the peepers. (tiny tree frogs.)
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
MOOOO!
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
I'd be loud and annoying too if I were a cow, people always trying to milk me and tenderize me for steak, it's a form of passive resistance!
 
Posted by Kayla (Member # 2403) on :
 
They're smelly, too!
 
Posted by screechowl (Member # 2651) on :
 
They are loud when it is feeding time and they are VERY loud when they get separated from their calves. We live in cow-calf country and I can tell this is absolute truth.
 
Posted by Kayla (Member # 2403) on :
 
Ooh, and I was out watering my straw the other day (which is down to cover the grass seed) and I saw a bird running down the street. It was the weirdest thing I'd ever seen! I think it must have been some type of Pheasant, or something. It had a longer neck than the pictures of pheasants I'm finding on Google. Almost like a wild goose, but it was the most incredibly rich brown color I've ever seen, with a deep red chest. And the top half brown was different than the bottom half brown. I can't remember exactly what was different, but I remember that almost exactly halfway down the bird, it changed. I'm almost tempted to say that it went from a solid color to a checkerboard color, but I'm not sure.

But a bird was running down the street! I tell you, it's crazy out there. That's why I try to stay indoors!
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
While in college for a few years I lived out in an old house on a farm. They had an electric fence that would break a lot and the cows would get in the yard. KC, my husky would have a field day. Eventually the cows got used to her and would sleep near her dog house. KC really enjoyed licking their ears out. I guess she was trying to mother them. Really grossed me out. But the cows seemed to like having her as a buddy…..
 
Posted by Book (Member # 5500) on :
 
I'm pretty much loud and annoying 24/7, even in my sleep.

I have night terrors.
 
Posted by screechowl (Member # 2651) on :
 
quote:
Peepers are loud. I mean LOUD. There is a small swamp is our back yard, and when i am talking on the phone in the house, people say they hear the peepers. (tiny tree frogs.)
I heard frogs for the first time this evening from the river.

I remember spring peepers from Virginia. I liked them, but then they were not right outside the window. Peepers from the past. Nice memory.
 
Posted by quidscribis (Member # 5124) on :
 
I've been told that cows are not as smelly as elephants.

See, cows wander around everywhere here. Well, we also have the stray dogs and cats, too, as well as goats and oxen and water buffalo and horses and sometimes, even an elephant.

Fahim tells me - because I'm lucky enough to not have experienced it myself - that elephant dung is the smelliest of the lot. He tells me that an elephant did its business in front of his parents house while he was still living there. Most atrocious. (We need a "smell no evil" graemlin. Where is it?)
 
Posted by screechowl (Member # 2651) on :
 
I never thought about elephants that way. Then again, days go by without elephants ever entering my thoughts.

You know you are not in Kansas anymore when...
 
Posted by screechowl (Member # 2651) on :
 
I wish you good luck with your wandering cows and elephants. I think it is time for me to count sheep.

Take care
 
Posted by ketchupqueen (Member # 6877) on :
 
I remember seeing something on kids having elephant-dung fights in Africa on TV as a child...
 
Posted by Steev (Member # 6805) on :
 
Cows can generally get rather vocal when they need to be milked.
 
Posted by Telperion the Silver (Member # 6074) on :
 
moooooooooooaaaaAAAAAAHAHAHHAHHA!!! Hahaha!! HEheeheheh!! MOO! Haha! MOOO!
 
Posted by Steev (Member # 6805) on :
 
I haven't seen that in years!

[ROFL]
 
Posted by Carrie (Member # 394) on :
 
quote:
Cows are loud
No kidding.

When I rode the bus to high school, we drove by a small cow pasture located just within the boundary of Green Bay, about a mile from my high school. And my high school was not exactly in a rural part of town...
 
Posted by quidscribis (Member # 5124) on :
 
Cows here wander around like cheap whores . . . At roundup time, we'll see a dozen or more cows herded down the main road by two guys wearing sarongs and flip flops.

The other annoying part of it is the cow patties lining the road. When you step on the road, you always have to look first.
 
Posted by UofUlawguy (Member # 5492) on :
 
Apparently somebody lives in the Secret Cow Level.
 
Posted by Scythrop (Member # 5731) on :
 
Imagine a cow with a bullhorn and a chainsaw...

Now that's a loud cow...
 
Posted by Jonathan K. (Member # 7720) on :
 
knock knock

who's there?

interupting cow

Interrup-

MOOOOOOOOOOO
 
Posted by screechowl (Member # 2651) on :
 
Is the presence of cows economic (are they for food or milking?) or is this like India?

Wondering.
 
Posted by screechowl (Member # 2651) on :
 
bump for quidscribis

question about cows

I am curious.

Edit: Nevermind. I looked up a previous thread and found my answer sort of. Should have done that to begin with.

[ April 09, 2005, 12:21 AM: Message edited by: screechowl ]
 
Posted by Mr.Funny (Member # 4467) on :
 
They may have been very loud, but did they have guns?
 
Posted by quidscribis (Member # 5124) on :
 
screechy, not ignoring you on purpose. My internet is broken. [Frown]

It's economic - there isn't enough grazing land this close to the city, so the cows are free to wander and graze on whatever vegetation and garbage is at the side of the road. Then, as I'm told, they wander home at milking time.

And it's like India. Sri Lanka has about 14% Hindus, keep in mind. So yes, there are the cows that are not used for eating or milk, but just wander around living out their existentialist existence, feeding on whatever.
 
Posted by screechowl (Member # 2651) on :
 
Thank you for the information.

Be careful where you step.
[Wink]
 
Posted by FlyingCow (Member # 2150) on :
 
::flies in::

::moos loudly::

::flies out::
 
Posted by Megan (Member # 5290) on :
 
There's a field across from our house that occasionally contains cows. When they wander into eyesight of the window, the dogs lose it. They're convinced that we need to know that the cows are there RIGHT NOW.
 


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