Cowism
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    • A Good Life Makes For Happy Cows
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  • Cow And Humanity
    • Cow Is Complete Ecology
    • Cow: An Engine Of Progress And Prosperity
    • Cow: A Life Form For All-round Good Of The World​
  • Cows Are Cool
    • The Old Man And The Cow - An Extraordinary Friendship
    • A Mean Leopard : Moo-ved By The Love of A Cow
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    • Looking Beyond Their Exterior
    • Motherly Licks That Saved A Life
    • Brainy Bovines
    • Cows Don’t Want to Die
    • Emily the Cow Who Saved Herself
    • Cows Never Forget A Place or a Face
    • Wooden Cow Moo-ves Hearts
    • The Social Lives of Cows
    • Canada Owes A Lot To This Cow
    • Gentle Giants
    • Cows To Reform Prisoners In Indian Jails
    • Cows Grieve
    • She Liked To Listen To Your Story
    • The Brave Russian Bull
    • Cows Are Intensely Emotional
    • Cow Feeds Baby Goats
    • Some Facts About Cows!
    • This One Is ‘Paan’ Fanatic!
    • Kids And Cows - In Ancient India
    • Cows Love This 8 Years Old Girl
    • Study : Cows Excel At Selecting Leaders
    • Bulls - An Observation
    • An Old Cow Tugs At Millions of Heartstrings
    • Cow’s Cradle
    • Sweet Music for Milking
    • Happy Cows, Happy Society
    • Holy Cow! De-stressing Is So Simple
    • The Path of Prosperity - Little Girl Has Better Idea
    • Cows - Fussy About Cleanliness
    • Cows Moo With A Regional Accent
    • Canny Cows
    • The ‘Gentle’ Bessie
    • 14 Cows For America
    • Ganga’s Story
    • Cows Form Cliques!
    • Cowlick - The Way To Give ‘Solace’
    • Story of Sadie - The Face of Modern Dairy Industry
    • Cows Have Strange Sixth Sense
    • Cows Are Precious
    • Ignorance - A Prerequisite of The Standard Western Diet
    • Inseparable Friends - A Calf And A Goat
    • What Do Cows Drink? - A Riddle
    • Suddenly in Fashion - Farming and Cows
    • Cow Fashion Show
    • This One Was My Bodyguard
    • Appendix
  • To Kill Cow
    • Section I : Life Is Sacred >
      • Animals Have A Soul
      • Mother And Child - A Story
      • Religious Philosophy And Attitude Towards Animals
      • Hunter And The Sage
      • Legalized Terrorism - Animal Abuse And Killing
    • Section II : Why Do Indians Consider Cow As Sacred? >
      • Sacred Cow - A Dumb Indian Idea?
      • Cow Gives And Gives And Gives
      • Humanity Owes Milk Debt To Cows
      • Cow - The Provider of All Human Necessities
      • Cow - A Symbol of Innocence, Purity And Magnanimity
      • To Further The Cause of Cow Protection
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NOBLE COW: MUNCHING GRASS LOOKING CURIOUS AND JUST HANGING AROUND

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28.
A Good Life Makes For Happy Cows

At Hare Krishna farm
By Julie Jammot

 

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       ​Milked by hand, allowed to breed naturally and free from the threat of slaughter, the cows at Gokul farm near London could be possibly the happiest in Britain.
       ​The 44 animals are owned by a community of Hare Krishnas, who live on the site at Aldenham bequeathed by Beatles guitarist George Harrison.
       ​As believers of a branch of Hinduism, the Hare Krishnas view cows  as sacred and treat them with respect, milking them by hand for the animals’ comfort and allowing them to calve less intensively than in industrial farms.
       ​Crucially, the community members are also vegetarian, guaranteeing that the cows are at no risk of slaughter.
     “They are very sensitive animals. It’s like if you have a dog — how you feel, the dog senses that,” says Shyamasundara Das, the head of the farm at Aldenham.
       ​“Here, because we have an atmosphere of cow care, the animals themselves are a lot more peaceful and tranquil, and maybe it’s also because there is no sense that they are going to be killed by us.”
       ​There are occasional massages, careful milking twice a day, and the spacious living quarters — the community has recently installed new cowsheds in French oak — the farm may well be the bovine equivalent of a five-star hotel.
       ​The cattle pay their way by pulling carts to take groups of school children or young families around the farm, as well as powering a traditional mill to grind the cereal that feeds the cows.
       ​The farm is built next to the Bhaktivedanta Manor, which Harrison donated to the Hare Krishna movement in the early 1970s and is now their British base.
       ​The presence of the sacred cows adds a spiritual element and brings the community closer to the Hindu ideal of a simple life in harmony with nature.

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       ​“Krishna is always seen surrounded by cows. He was a cow herd boy 5,000 years ago in India,” says Kripamoya Das, a Hare Krishna priest. There is also a more practical link between the believers and the cows.
       ​The flowers used to decorate Deities in the temple next to the manor, where barefoot believers pray morning, noon and night, are fed to the cows once they begin to droop, as a thank you for all their hard work.

       ​Although their humane approach means that calves are allowed to continue suckling their mothers’ milk for far longer than in industrial farms, the cows at Gokul still produce a large amount of milk.
       ​At the moment this is drunk only by the community at Aldenham, but Shyamasundara Das is keen to begin selling it the world outside. However, the cost of such a feel-good product is a barrier. The milk currently costs about three pounds (3.5 euros, 4.7 dollars) a litre and, pending the approval of regulators, would be sold at a hefty 3.5 pounds a litre, making it perhaps the most expensive cow’s milk in Europe.
       ​And is it any better than normal milk?
       ​Mark Gardener, a vet who regularly visits Gokul farm, feels so. He is confident that the cows here are likely to be happier.
       ​“Normally in a dairy farm each cow has to justify his position” by having calves every few months or producing sufficient milk, and if they don’t they will be sent to slaughter, he says.
       ​​“Whereas here the cows aren’t under that pressure.”

Interesting Facts About Cows

Cows have been known to walk for miles to find their calves.
Cows like to sleep close to their families
Sleeping arrangements are determined by their position in the social hierarchy.
There are approximately 920 different breeds of cows in the world.
Cows have incredible senses: they have near panoramic vision, can detect odours up to five miles away and they can hear low and high frequency sounds better than humans.