I spend so much of my time out in the great outdoors, plus for many years this has been with a dog or dogs. Fields occupied by cows therefore are something I have come across so many times. Some people have phobias of cows and sadly, there are the very rare occasions you hear of unfortunate deaths when dog walkers have passed by a field of cows.
Here I will explain how I personally deal with a situation, clear up some misconceptions I hear plus try to give advice.
The Stats
It is sadly true that cows are the most deadly large animal in Britain. In the 20 years of this century, just over 80 people have died from cows, about 4 per year on average. But! We must remember that over 70% of these deaths have happened in the workplace, farmers and their staff in their line of work.
That makes the odds on it being a dog walker very low indeed. If you think of the thousands and thousands of people who walk on rights of way that include groups of cows you can see the number is tiny.
What The Cow Sees and Feels
The usual image or thought of cows is of a big docile domesticated animal that wanders around the fields, chewing on grass. But they are animals still with natural instincts like any other animal.
They are not usually bothered by humans at all, but say there is a field of cows and their calves, and you add a dog in the mix they may feel their children are threatened, just like all mothers would. This is usually why they come running over to you. More on what to do later.
We shouldn’t forget though, and I see it a lot on my walks. We must not mistake curiosity for animosity. I have been on many a walk where cows and calves and come over to have a closer look and to say hello. They are not necessarily stampeding, and this happens as the case more often than not.
They have peripheral vision. We see forwards at 180 degrees. Cows have eyes in the side of their heads and have 330 to 360 degree vision. That means when you think a cow hasn’t spotted you, be sure they may have.
That being said, cows have blind spots, directly behind because of its body, and the spot directly in front of its nose. Have you ever fed a cow some grass through a fence? It will step forward then just before it gets to your hand you reach forward and it steps back scared. That is because it is being cautious, it lost sight of your hand.
For interest they also don’t have a good sense of depth of vision either. On a sunny day, when they come across a new shadow across the grass, maybe from a tree, it is hard for them to tell if it it a flat shadow or a 300 ft drop.
What Farmers Are Advised
Before we look at what we should do or what we should responsibly do with our dogs we must understand what the farmers do and why these animals are on public rights of way.
Farmers are advised to respect public walkers just as much as they want us to respect their livestock. They are well advised if they do have any problem cows or especially cows with calves, to put them in a field without any public thoroughfares..
Yes farmers do have some responsibility and do get liability insurance. I have noticed that where paths cross fields with livestock the path signs are often better maintained and marked well. That is the farmer helping guide us better around their cattle or sheep.
Training Your Dog
Ok, this is what is in our own hands, teaching our dogs some good manners and behaviour. If you are getting a dog or puppy and are an avid walker in the countryside like me, you should really train it to behave for your environment.
Please remember that if your dog is out of control chasing and worrying sheep and cattle the farmer is well within their rights to shoot the dog. I have sadly seen it with my own eyes, a beautiful non aggressive golden retriever was running around a field of sheep I used to live near. Naturally the dog’s owner was distraught, yes you could see the dog wasn’t even aggressive, but even just a dog playfully chasing sheep can do a lot of damage to the herd and a farmers livelihood. Worrying can really cause physical harm to livestock and even more so pregnant ones.
So, I am a hiker and I have got Malc, a border collie, a breed that is built and bred as a livestock herding machine! I have spent and am still spending hours, getting out there teaching him right from wrong around cows and sheep. Repetition, repetition, repetition, without letting him get away with it, and rewarding when good, sheep and cows are to be ignored and you focus on me. That is side by side with control both on and off lead. Collies are amazing companions and hiking dogs but I want years of stress free walks in the outdoors in future, not nervous panic on entering a field.
So I myself have now got Malc to a point that he would rather focus (herd) the ball in my hand in this situation whilst completely ignoring the cattle. After passing through the field he gets the reward he knows is coming for being good. Ball chasing and better fun 🙂
All breeds have their traits and a lot of these traits can worry sheep and cows. A little barking yap dog. A fast sighthound seeing something to chase, a guard dog that see a threat in other big animals. a playful breed that just wants to play with any animal.
All I am saying is if you channel these traits well and work long and hard on them we can all enjoy the countryside in harmony, stress free.
What to do if cows come towards you and your dog
Even as Malc gets better and better and calmer in these situations, the word I always think is respect. If I see cows in a field I am about to enter regardless whether they have calves or not, I respect the situation.
Stay calm! Most cows that are in fields with pathways are inquisitive and not aggressive. Just simply and calmly carry on walking.
One thing I would not do at all is pass between a mother and calf, that is asking for trouble. A farmer would rather you go a whole other route around than stick religiously to a path and worry them.
Never panic or do sudden movements. If they come right up to you, don’t run or turn away suddenly. That will makes them play chase themselves.
If you do feel you are getting cornered and feel at serious risk then remember this, you cannot outrun a cow yourself but your dog can. Let go of the lead. 99 per cent of the time the cows are chasing your dog and not you at all. They will follow the dog. You can then get yourself to safety and recall your dog to you.
Stress Free Walking
After all is said and done, I will say again, thousands and thousands of walkers pass through fields of cows ever year. Yet there are such a minimal amount of injuries and dangerous situations. Don’t stress, respect the surroundings, have fun, enjoy the great outdoors.
Very interesting. But …. I walk with 3 dogs, one of them is a large herding breed. Last week I had to detour 2.5 mile on a road to avoid a field with young and very curious cows. They didnt seem aggressive, just curious but it was intimidating. I did a quick U-turn. There is probably no way I could keep my 3 dogs calm if the cows came any closer. Is there any way of ‘keeping the cows at distance’ , anything I can do so they don’t want to come close to us?
Hi, it depends. A lot of farmers shout, clap their hands and make a lot of noise. The biggest worries for you will be a group of young bullocks as they are the ones that really get curious and follow everywhere.
I have had a number of difficult encounters with cows and bullocks when trying to cross fields with various dogs over the years. My scariest was recently when walking with a friend and no dogs. We stuck to the path but a group of young bullocks crowded round us, we walked on side by side trying to stay calm but my friend was very nervous and I had to hold her arm to stop her running. I was actually getting pushed aggressively in the back by one, luckily we had reached the stile & jumped over it. Thank god I didn’t have the dog. You say farmers have a responsibility too, but it can’t be good practice to put young bullocks in a field with a popular public footpath running through it. There is another walk near me that I haven’t been able to do because the farmer keeps a huge bull in a field on the route and there are big warning signs saying basically you enter at your own risk.
Hi, yes bullocks can be pretty feisty and curious can’t they? Farmers are asked to think about what they put in fields where footpaths cross but if they only have a couple of fields then it is hard for them to not use them.
yesterday i walked with 2 dogs passed a field with about 30 cows that started to get aggressive and wanting to herd stampede/ attack, luckily a 3foot fence and trees were between us and i was able to hide behind the trees and stopped probable serious injury, very scary!
Hi , I am sorry to ask this , mayhaphs silly question. But I am very scared of cows but on a walk my husbands advice is to trust him and follow him and I will be fine , so after more protesting a teeny few words I dutifully follow ( holding my breath as I go ) my concerns??? Molly very small very quiet dog . Now no way will I put her down so my question is , will the cows notice I am carrying her ? She’s a old girl so running away could be a problem. Please help , if only to save one angry husband who insists “ it will be fine “ . Kind regards
I hear what you are saying. In this case I would say your husband has full responsibilty to take the dog himself through the field. Every group of cows are different.
Informative and well written thank you.
Perhaps an article on respect for agricultural fields which also require respect from walkers and their dogs, at best they damage crops, at worst, defacation can ruin a crop.
Hi yes already looking at that good point thank you. Plus the other way around to keep it even. The amount of crops going over the paths
This read has enlightened me so much! Thank You. Cows are in their own environment/space as with most interactions between them, our dogs and humans it should also come down to RESPECT. One should respect the Bovine Beauties & armed with some great info here –I think – I for one will be able to accomplish that quite nicely.
Hi Pat! Thanks so much for the kind words. Yes, respect works all ways doesn’t it?
I hope you don’t mind me saying this as an extra, but even if you can’t see animals and/or they’re not too close to the path, please don’t let them off the lead for a run without permission from the landowner. A field might look empty to you but it could be the farmers corn or next crop of hay for feeding in the winter. A few times we’ve opened up a hay bale to feed at lambing to have to bin the whole thing because somebody didn’t pick up! Thank you.
Oh my yes a really good point. Maybe we should do an article all about respecting all types of landowners where walking rights of way pass through?
Interesting my first instinct would have been to run. Now I would avoid fields with cows in at all costs
Thanks. Yes all you need to do is calmly walk through slowly. No need to fully avoid