A Derbyshire cattle farmer wants to make his cows look uglier in order to try and stem a tide of social media influencers who have been stampeding across his land to film viral content with the animals.
Alex Birch is planning to crossbreed his Highland cows to make them “less photogenic”, he told the BBC, as TikTokers’ interest in them means they “don’t get any peace”.
Highland cows, which look like an “unholy hybrid of Boris Johnson and [a] delivery bicycle”, have also attracted many admirers in Kent, said The Guardian. When they were brought to the Hothfield Heathlands nature reserve near Ashford, videos of the cows went viral on TikTok, prompting a “flood” of camera-wielding visitors.
Eventually, Kent Wildlife Trust, which manages the site, had to “remove the cows” because they were becoming “distressed” and might “react out of fear”, potentially injuring human interlopers.
The Highland Cattle Society has told people not to treat cows as “selfie props” and the Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals told The National that Highland cows, although “often perceived as calm and approachable”, were “still large, powerful livestock animals”. So “like any animal, their behaviour can change if they feel stressed or threatened”.
With the average UK dairy cow weighing 620kg (98st), “even a gentle knock” can seriously injure a human, said Wayne Owen from the Health and Safety Executive. The best advice, according to The Guardian, is to exercise “extreme caution”.
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