Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Cow whisperer aims to improve livestock handling

The herd of lowing cows parted like a wave before Curt Pate, who rode straight up to the bull and let him know who was in charge without making a sound. Pate, a 49-year-old Montana cowboy who consulted on the 1998 Robert Redford film "The Horse Whisperer," switched his focus to cows about five years ago and has been traveling the country teaching ranchers to think like cattle and use low-stress methods of handling livestock. At the moment, his work is sponsored by the National Cattlemen's Beef Association, which is eager to counter bad publicity generated by a widely seen, secretly recorded video of cows on an Ohio dairy farm being beaten and prodded with pitchforks. "It makes me ill," Pate said. "I really can't stand it. If you care about animals, you just can't stand those things." He said his goal is to teach modern ranchers traditional livestock handling methods used 100 years ago. Back then, there were fewer corrals and fences, and a ranch manager didn't spend as much time on a computer as with livestock. When he confronted the bull, Pate was demonstrating how to steer it away from the agitated females and into an empty pasture without upsetting it or getting the cows even more excited...more

I wonder if there is a market for my skills - I'm a wife whisperer.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Cows can't talk. Wives can. You might want to think about it before jumping into your new profession!

Tick said...

Maybe you could give me lessons. Around my place if you want to get a word in edgewise you have to shout.