grahamg
Old codger
- Location
- South of Manchester, UK
"As the resident expert on cows" I have a few suggestions for you!
The first is cattle can become unsettled into the night, especially when moved on to grass for the first time in spring, (it is spring isn't it?!).
Usually they settle down again in a day or two, and "you've got to remember a cow had four stomachs", in order to digest fibre rich foods, and tummy upstets of all kinds are possible.
I'd agree about a lot of noise coming from female cattle, when young calves, a few weeks old maybe, have just been removed from them, though in this case the OP suggests its unlikely to be this cause.
I can stand quite a bit of loud noise, especially from my own cattle, when I had some, and you always feel differently about your own don't you, (its like your own children making a racket often doesn't affect you as much). However, all should settle down fairly quickly I believe, as I once had to try to persuade a near neighbour when I housed a sow next to her garden, and her dog barked at it all night!
Luckily the lady and her dog, came to love their porcine companion in the field alongside their property.
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The first is cattle can become unsettled into the night, especially when moved on to grass for the first time in spring, (it is spring isn't it?!).
Usually they settle down again in a day or two, and "you've got to remember a cow had four stomachs", in order to digest fibre rich foods, and tummy upstets of all kinds are possible.
I'd agree about a lot of noise coming from female cattle, when young calves, a few weeks old maybe, have just been removed from them, though in this case the OP suggests its unlikely to be this cause.
I can stand quite a bit of loud noise, especially from my own cattle, when I had some, and you always feel differently about your own don't you, (its like your own children making a racket often doesn't affect you as much). However, all should settle down fairly quickly I believe, as I once had to try to persuade a near neighbour when I housed a sow next to her garden, and her dog barked at it all night!
Luckily the lady and her dog, came to love their porcine companion in the field alongside their property.