She was ten miles away from the only home she’d ever known.  She was in her new pasture, and she was surrounded by grass, glorious grass.

She was content.  This was what I had dreamed of.  And this is just as I found her.

Mama Red comes running!

I spotted her from my brother’s truck as we crested the hill. She lifted her head from eating.  She knew Jamie’s truck and started our way.  She began to run. Continue reading »

Mama Red and Baby Boy and Baby Girl

It started two long weeks ago with a phone call from my brother, Jamie, on whose farm in South Carolina Mama Red and her one-year-old twins (Baby Boy is beside her and Baby Girl on the ground) as well as her steer from two years ago live.  And when I say “live,” I mean these animals can ride out their days there until they die.  For Mama Red and Baby Girl, this means being able to stay alive vs. at around age 8 or so, being taken to slaughter where they make hamburger out of old mama cows.  For Baby Boy, though, this means being able to live past age two, when he would be considered at his prime for steaks and roasts, etc.

This is unheard of, this freedom to live out their days.  Continue reading »

Mama Red and twins say "hi"

I got to visit with Mama Red and her twins last week and wanted to send along the latest pic.   Her twin girl is standing beside her and twin boy is laying on the ground.  Notice the markings on the girl’s face.  Like mama, like daughter!

Look at how curious they were.  I got right up on them, and they let me!

I must tell you that what you’re looking at is totally out of the ordinary, though.  In fact, you may never see another picture like this in a long time — maybe even never.  Do you know why? Continue reading »

Mama Red, beautiful Mama Red

On rare days, if I’m lucky, I catch a glimpse of the divine.

I caught such a glimpse one November morning on my father’s farm, in light so early it still could be considered dark.  I caught it in a gathering of mama cows, a dozen of them, all huddled and straining against the corner of an old barbed wire fence, each with her chin shoved high into the air and sending forth sounds.  They were guttural.  They made me shiver.

Above their mouths, a mist hovered.

I had been in bed asleep in my father’s house of brick when their sounds woke me and drew me forth into his pasture.  I stood some ten feet away from them in my pajamas and boots.  The air was chilled, but I wasn’t cold.

Mostly I could see their eyes, these mamas, their lids pulled back as if with rope and showing a vast sea of white surrounding circles of brown.  One mama had her eyes cut towards me.  She stood the closest to the corner, and as she bellowed, she looked my way.  This was the cow who would become Mama Red.

I'm ready for my close up now.

I would not see it yet, but she and the others had pushed forward with such force that the end post angled out as if it was an arm waving at something familiar.

And it was.  Their babies.   They were some thirty yards away, at the other end of a grassy lane that had lost its color in the first frost.  Like their mothers, they stood huddled at the corner of a barbed wire fence.  They, too, sent forth sounds.  Deep ones.  Long ones.

I would come to know they were steers, neutered males, aged six to eight months.  My father, the afternoon before, had separated them from their mothers.  It’s called weaning.  It’s what farmers do.  Otherwise, the mothers would continue to let their babies nurse, and that is not good, they tell me, since likely these mothers were carrying again.  Carrying another baby inside them.  This is the process.  As is what would happen later that morning when the sun came up full and strong.  A trailer hitched to a truck would pull into my father’s driveway and come around the back of his house, past the corral where the steers stood, to the chute on the back of the barn, where the steers would be herded and loaded into the trailer and then taken to the cattle barn to sell to other farmers, who would feed them and fatten them for the only thing many believe steers are good for, slaughter.

The sounds that morning were deafening.

A flock of geese flew into the air from my father’s pond, set into the earth down the hill.   They flew past the mamas and towards the babies, but then stopped short and made a sharp turn and flew away from us all, as if not wanting to flaunt their freedom.

Mama Red’s eyes stayed on me, and I knew in my bones what she wanted.  She wanted me to get her baby back.  To knock down her fence and his, so he could once again place his mouth around her teat and draw forth all that she would freely give.

My eyes flooded.

She let out another sound that joined in the chorus around her.  And I fixed on the mist just released from their mouths, and I imagined it floating my way, to my face, which I would hold chin up in the hopes that the mist, surely holy, would come find me.  And save me.  Like a baptism.  Like what my Sarah, the protagonist in my novel, has been needing from the moment I created her.  Needing to find the salvation she has spent her whole life seeking.

I bow my head in reverence to Mama Red

I told Mama Red and the others that day, and I said it out loud, I said I can’t get your babies back, but I can write a book that honors the way you love them.

The trailer came.  The steers left.  The mamas continued to stand at the corner and call for them, even though no sounds came back their way.  This would continue for a couple of days, and then the cows, one by one, would leave the fence and go back out in the pasture, where they would fill their bellies to feed out the new babies inside of them.  Occasionally, they would look back towards the corral and bellow.

Mama Red would be among them.  And like her, those that had claimed the fence line, would have dried blood scattered up and down their necks and chests, where the barbs from the wire had penetrated their hair and skin as they had sought freedom.

I would have a dream some days later that the grassy lane was a channel of water.  And in that water were cows, mama cows, moving past me, their heads working hard to stay high.  I was standing in the pasture where they had stood.  I was standing on holy ground.  Except I was behind no fence.  It no longer was there.  When they passed my way, they kept their eyes cut towards me, and all over again, I made them my promise.  To show the world this piece of divine that I had encountered on a November morning on my father’s land, one that will teach my Sarah what the cows already know in their bones – that children do matter, maybe even the most.

Every now and then, if we’re lucky, we run across someone who makes us want to just flat be better.  I’ve run across such a person.  Her name is Helga Tacreiter, and she runs The Cow Sanctuary http://www.thecowsanctuary.org in Bridgeton, New Jersey.  Here is how she introduces herself:

I LOVE COWS. Big, beautiful, breathing cows. I grew to love them when I worked on farms, milking and feeding these peaceful creatures and getting to know their distinct individual personalities. My heart broke each time one of my friends was sent to slaughter, which is the sad reality of farm life. But what could I do? I made their lives as decent as possible while they were in my care, then I had to kiss them goodbye.

Until the storm: a huge spring storm that lasted most of the night, with roaring thunder and lightning bolts hurtling down with deafening cracks.

Continue reading »

I realized when I wrote yesterday’s blog on Billy O’s finally finding his place in the goat pecking order, that it’s time for me to move on to another big love that I have, writing.   “Note to self,” I said, “make your next blog about the novel you are writing.”

Which today’s blog is and is not.

The “is not” first.   I was in my writing space this morning, working on my novel like a good girl, when I decided to pick up my Blackberry and check to see the latest weather.   Before I did that, though, I saw the latest Publishers Marketplace Lunch pop up in my email, so I opened it up.  (Note to self: Tomorrow, leave contraption outside room.  No, lock it up somewhere!)

The good news is my detour lead to a terrifically inspiring article about Tom Franklin, an Alabama writer who teaches at Ole Miss. Continue reading »

Mama Red and the twin she tried to abandon

I told you last week I wanted to try to find out why some mother cows with twins only accept one and abandon the other. Was it gender, size or something else, I asked.

I searched on the internet and talked with several farmers. The first told me it was a matter of the mother being “confused.” I knew that wasn’t right. If there’s one thing I believe, it’s that nature is clear, perfectly clear. Then one told me the mother chooses the first one she licks. Another said it was the one she thought was the strongest, which typically is the male. (Ninety percent of all twin births are male/female.) Another said it’s the second born.

Finally, someone said, “It’s a mystery.” Ahhhhh…..yes, a mystery.

The most interesting piece of information I discovered, though, was this: Sometimes a mother cow will appear to abandon one for the other. But this is not her intention at all. What she is doing is managing them better by creating a “dayshift” and a “nightshift” for herself by having her twins in two separate places. Better for their protection, the farmer told me. In fact, he says we humans might intervene too soon.

Imagine that. Humans intervening in nature.

Mama Red in the novel I am writing has twins. I’m not sure yet what she does with them — whether she will outright abandon one or will do as the last farmer up there told me and set up two shifts for herself. What I do know is I will choose the one that serves the story, the one that helps Sarah, the woman I am writing about, find the healing she needs in order to be the mother she has longed to be.

My brother Jamie took the picture of Mama Red and her calf on the home page. This was just after Mama Red had given birth to this baby boy. What Jamie did not know at the time was that Mama Red actually had given birth to twins. This little boy had a baby sister.

Here’s a hard truth of nature. When mother cows give birth to twins, they typically abandon one. The old survival of the fittest thinking. So when Jamie came upon this newborn girl, he didn’t know where she belonged. But then all he had to do was look on the markings on her face and know she was Mama Red’s. Look at how she came right up to Jamie!

Are you my mama?


A happy ending! Jamie put Mama Red and her two babies in the corral near the barn and “helped” Mama Red accept her little girl. All is good!

Hey, now I want to find out how a mother cow chooses the one she’ll keep. Is it based on gender or size or something else? Stay tuned….I’ll return with the answer in the coming days.