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 Texas : Features : Columns : Spunky Flat and Beyond :
THE “KILLER” COWS
by George Lester
George Lester
Our family lived on a farm near Lorena, Texas prior to our moving to Spunky Flat. We moved there in the early thirties after the oil boom turned to bust in west Texas. The countryside was in stark contrast to the arid flat land of our previous home. Our farm lay in the rolling hills of north central Texas where trees were commonplace instead of a rarity as in the desert area of Wink, Texas. It gave me great joy to run across the grassy fields and rest under the oaks on our farm, which I did almost daily.

Our cousin Mildred from Louisiana came to visit us one summer and I wanted to share the fun of roaming the meadows with her. I was 5 and she was 6 years my senior so I really wanted to be grownup like her. I took her by the hand and led her through the gate out to the open pasture. We strolled along enjoying the fresh air and the scenery for a while when I suddenly saw a look of horror on her face. I turned to see a heard of cattle rushing toward us at breakneck speed. We started to running for our lives but the cattle were clearly gaining on us. We figured these vicious beasts would soon trample us. Mildred screamed at me. “There’s a fence up there. If we can make it we’ll be safe.” I could feel their hot breath on my back as we slipped under the barbed wire in the nick of time. Just getting a fence between the cattle and us was not enough. We ran inside a vacant house, slammed the door and peered nervously out the window. The cows kept bellowing and walking around with what we took to be a serious threat of bodily harm. Eventually they tired of waiting and one at a time ambled off to the other side of the pasture. After the last animal left we saw our chance and made a break for it back to the main house. It took us several minutes to calm down and tell my father what peril we had experienced. I couldn’t understand why he burst out laughing. This was serious business.

Mildred was a city girl and I was too young to realize that each day my father would walk the same path we had taken and the cattle would follow him to the building we had used for refuge. That vacant house was full of hay and they were waiting to be fed.

They weren’t killer cows after all. They were just hungry.
© George Lester
Spunky Flat and Beyond - A Memoir

October 27, 2004
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