Kristina Pepelko is a writer, avid traveler, food lover and passionate animal, environmental and social... Kristina Pepelko is a writer, avid traveler, food lover and passionate animal, environmental and social justice advocate. She has taught English in Croatia and worked as a travel writer for Like Croatia. Currently, she serves as a poetry editor for the literary journal, Squalorly and as a volunteer for Keep Michigan Wolves Protected in addition to being an OGP Green Monster who focuses on the Buzz Monster and Earth Monster channels. You can follow her on Twitter: @K__Pep. Read more about Kristina Pepelko Read More
In the meat industry, breeding cows, like most farm animals, are often perceived as mere commodities – available only to push out calf after calf until they too follow in their babies’ footsteps and are sold for slaughter.
A mother and calf rarely spend more than six months together, most calves are taken soon after birth.
As Kris Ingram, manager of Signal Hill Sanctuary in Yass River, Australia tells OGP, “A breeding cow isn’t allowed to wean her calf naturally, because she takes too long. Calves are given high fat, high protein feed for a few weeks to allow them to adjust, then they’re forcibly removed from their mothers.”
“Calves and cows are in separate paddocks, never to touch each other again. Both will grieve, both will try to find their way back to each other, and both will suffer the trauma that you and I would suffer if we were separated from our children by force, before we are ready to let them go,” Kris continues.
A Murray Grey cow named Granny, who came to live at Signal Hill just a few months ago, spent 15 years of her life as a breeding cow.
Unlike thousands of others in the meat industry, she was treated quite well at her cattle farm, which is known for the high quality, health, and condition of their animals.
Despite this better environment and the fact that Granny was known by a name instead of a number, Granny was still forced to be separated from the 12 calves she birthed – all of whom eventually were destined to be sold for meat.
After 15 years of service, Kris tells us that a person with connections to her cattle farmer decided that “she deserved to live out her twilight years in peace and comfort, rather than being sold on to a meat auction.”
And so, Granny arrived into the caring hands of Signal Hill – a relatively new sanctuary set out on 200 acres of natural bushland near the Yass River. The land once served as a large milking farm, but as the organization writes on Facebook, “its future will be very different.” The sanctuary is currently seeking funds to make this a fully realized dream via a crowdfunding campaign.





Lead image source: Signal Hill Sanctuary
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So sweet!
Look at the love that baby has for his momma
❤️❤️❤️what a happy ending for both granny and valentine❤️