For most Simmentals in the United States, where the breed is raised predominantly for meat, a ride in a trailer means a brutal end at the slaughterhouse. Thunder, however, was headed toward a new beginning at our New York Shelter.
For the previous four years, Thunder lived at Nevins Farm, a shelter run by the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (MSPCA). This organization, the second oldest humane society in the United States, offered him a home when his former caregiver could no longer keep him. Gentle and friendly, Thunder was a favorite among staff and visitors and, over the years, also caught the attention of motorists who passed by his paddock daily on the adjacent highway. Thunder became something of a mascot for Nevins Farm, as well as a powerful ambassador for farm animals.
Thunder had many human admirers, but he had no cow herd to call his own. His most recent bovine friend at Nevins was a cow named Baby Bell, who joined him in 2011. Thunder was smitten. But, after only three weeks, Baby Bell was adopted into a loving home, and Thunder was once again without bovine companionship.
Cows are herd animals, who feel most comfortable amidst their own kind. They form deep, lifelong friendships; share life’s pleasures, and protect one another. Thunder’s MSPCA caregivers understood that Thunder was deprived of this special bond and began to search for a home with more companions for him. When we learned of Thunder’s longing for friends, we offered him a place in our cow herd.