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A
Straight Dope Classic from Cecil's storehouse of human knowledge16-Jan-1990
Dear Cecil:
Is there such a thing as cow tipping? I have two friends, both sons
of farmers. One says it can be done and is great sport. The other
says no way.
Do cows sleep standing up? Can they be tipped? I
suppose this will take some late night research. --Robert Schreur,
Baltimore
Dear Robert:
Don't look at me, pal. Fortunately for the cause of science, not
all researchers are handicapped by an instinct for survival.
It
appears there really is a rural pastime called cow tipping, which
is favored by likkered-up country kiddies with nothing better to do
on a Saturday night. (One presumes the sheep were busy.)
The cow is
easy prey for pranksters since it's one of a number of critters
(the horse is another) that sleeps standing up with its knees
locked.
I recently discussed the fine points of cow tipping with a reformed
ex-tipper named Robin, who had done it (once) as a student.
Robin
had attended Albion College in Michigan, a school so snooty it's
said the students read The Preppie Handbook without realizing it
was satirical. Despite their pretensions, however, Albionians were
mad for cow tipping.
The usual modus operandi, Robin told me, was to get tanked at some
frat party and then drive out with a half dozen of your most
brainless friends to some nearby farmer's field.
While the rest of
the group watched from a safe distance, the two most daring
lunatics took off their shoes, climbed over the fence, snuck up on
a dozing cow, pushed, and then ran like hell.
Watching a cow tip over apparently is the sort of Zen experience
that only those with higher consciousness or a couple six-packs can
properly appreciate.
Remember that film snippet from the TV show
Laugh-In where the guy riding the tiny tricycle suddenly falls
over? Same deal.
Once down, the cow woke up, got pissed, scrambled
up, and rousted out the rest of the herd, resulting in pandemonium.
Sounds like a hoot.
Farmers, of course, aren't crazy about cow tipping because the cow
might get hurt. There's also a chance one of the idiot students
might get killed, so it's not like it's all bad.
Happily for the cows,
tipping is the sort of thing even the most desperate only feel
compelled to do once, and most people never feel compelled to do at
all.
Obviously the dairy industry's public education program
("Please, No Tipping") has finally paid off.
A CONTRARY VIEW: COWS ARE LOUSY TIPPERS
Dear Cecil:
Regarding cow tipping, your friend Robin tells lies.
If a sleeping
cow could be tipped over by some tanked-up frat rat, she could be
tipped over by the wind. Mother Nature is not so easily outsmarted.
Cows weigh from less than a thousand pounds to around two thousand
pounds, and they have a low center of gravity. Tipping a cow would
be like toppling a low-built piece of concrete statuary.
It would
not be a tip-and-run situation. It would be a challenge, and old
Bossy is not going to just stand there and cooperate.
Methinks
Robin make up the whole story so you wouldn't know he and his
fellow frat rats really were looking for the sheep. --Marty Murphy,
Chicago
Dear Cecil:
You have been misinformed about the fabled practice of cow tipping.
I spent a year working on a dairy farm where I participated in
countless 3:30 AM milkings and observed over 300 sleeping cows a
day. Cows sleep lying down, not standing up. --Mitchell Bellman,
Montreal, Quebec
Dear Cecil:
Despite popular belief, horses do not go into a deep sleep standing
up like cows. Horses go into something of a catnap in which they
lock their knees, bow their heads, and leave their eyes open.
In
order to really sleep, they must do so lying down. For this reason
and the fact that they have exceptional hearing, it is almost
impossible to sneak up on a horse.
It is also dangerous because
some will turn and kick before they run. So please tell your
readers not to try "horse tipping." --Terese Hernandez, Chicago
Dear folks:
When you're out on the front lines of science like myself, you
learn to expect days like this. On the one hand we have various
profound theoretical and philosophical reasons cow tipping is
impossible; on the other, somebody who claims to have seen it done.
I checked back with Robin (who is female, incidentally). She sticks
with her story.
To review: One night after a boozy party at Albion
College in Michigan in either the fall of 1980 or the spring of
1981, Robin drove with a carload of other kids out to a field where
a bunch of sleeping cows were standing.
Whilst she and the others
watched from behind a fence (guesstimated distance: the width of a
football field), two freshman boys crept up on a likely cow and
gave it a shove, as a consequence whereof the cow tipped over.
Kind
of limited entertainment value, but I guess at Albion it's either
that or watch the milk curdle.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, knowledgeable people I checked with
(a couple farmers, an animal science expert) claim cow tipping
can't happen.
Apart from their sheer size (1200 pounds is typical),
cows do not fall into a deep sleep while standing the way horses do
(more on this below). Rather, they simply doze while chewing their
cud. They are easily startled, making it difficult to sneak up on
them.
Robin believes the two freshman boys were reasonably stealthy in
sneaking up on the cow in question, which may not have been full
grown.
She admits that given the darkness and the distance, it's
conceivable there was some furtive funny business--tripping the cow
with a rope or some such thing. But she can recall no definite
evidence that this occurred and has no doubt that the cow did fall
over.
Robin has forgotten who her fellow tippers were, making her story
impossible to corroborate, but she gives every sign of sincerity.
Either she hallucinated the whole thing or cow tipping is possible
under some conditions.
Subsequent reports from others--for example, on alt.folklore.urban
on the Usenet, which is always a 100% reliable source of information--persuade me that while cow tipping ain't
necessarily
easy, it's definitely possible.
Given the inconclusive state of the cow tipping debate, I am
pleased to make the following definite statement regarding Ms.
Hernandez's claim about horses' sleeping habits: it's wrong, lady, WRONG WRONG WRONG! (Sorry, but it's been a
rough week.)
Horses
routinely fall into deep sleep while standing up (which is not to
say they can't be startled awake). Some can go for many days without
lying down, though most recline for at least a short time each day.
One researcher (Winchester, 1943) has claimed that horses use less
energy while standing than lying down--for one thing, it's easier
to breathe. Sounds good to me, brother. Next case.
--CECIL ADAMS
The Straight Dope / Questions or
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