So, I’m reading this book
on milk (Milk: A global history by Hannah Velten) when I come across this
picture on the right and I’m thinking “OK, this is looking a bit strange, and
is surely quite disconcerting for both species.”
The photo was taken in
1982. It is a young lad blowing, via a tube, air into the vagina of a cow to
induce milk letdown. I have read that similar result can be achieved by blowing
air into the anus.
I know what you are
thinking:
1. No, no, no, you are
kidding me, right? No. It’s true, and it’s called “cow blowing” or insufflation. It has been described in many parts of the
world, and the “art” has been around for a long time. Back in 440 BC a bloke
called Herodotus described this in horses: “... they insert a tube made of bone
and shaped like a flute into the mare’s anus, and blow; and while one blows the
other one milks.”
2. OK, who was the first
person to think of this?
“Hey Dad, Daisy won’t let
down any milk, what should we do?”
“Have you tried scratching
behind her ear?”
“Yes. Didn’t work.”
“What about rubbing her
tummy”.
“Doesn’t work either".
Dad, stuck for ideas,
decides to play a joke on the kids. “Try blowing air up her backside.” And so
the incredible discovery began.
Seriously, I would like
to know the physiology behind this practice, but I had difficulty getting an
answer. Is it a physical response or does the air stimulate the release of
oxytocin? Anyway, there is a fascinating, although long, history of
insufflation of cattle here. There is also a short TV news video here. When food is not always easy to come by you have to admire human
ingenuity to get nutrition.
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