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Students, Alumni Clamor to Take Care of University of Vermont’s Cows Amid Coronavirus


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(BURLINGTON, Vt.) — When the coronavirus pandemic forced the University of Vermont to close and send its students home, the alarm spread: What would happen to the cows?

The university’s beloved herd of about 100 dairy cows is normally tended by students taking part in the Cooperative for Real Education in Agricultural Management program, or CREAM. And without those students, the fate of the cows seemed to be in jeopardy.

But in no time, dozens of CREAM alumni and students were clamoring to spend their spring and summer caring for the Holsteins. “I would rather do nothing else than this over the summer,” said recent graduate Claudia Sacks, of Macungie, Pennsylvania.

On a recent hot weekday, she rose in the dark to help milk the cows at 3:30 a.m. By early afternoon she was shoveling out the calves’ stalls. When she sees her favorite cow, Lazlo, she hugs her around the neck and gives her a kiss.

“I’ve learned so much from them,” she said.

“They’ve taught me how to be a kind person and how to love other people. You go into the barn and you see one of the cows licking another cow and it’s just, I don’t know, just a sense of sisterhood almost between them so it’s really lovely to see the family that they’ve formed between themselves but also the family that we can form with them.”

Read more: ‘I Could See Everything Just Passing By.’ As Colleges Close Amid Coronavirus, Students’ Dreams Are Put On Hold — Perhaps Forever

The other six students are passionate, too, about the animals and hope to go veterinary school. They know the cows by name, how much milk each one is giving, who each cow’s sire is, who she’s bred to and when she’s due to calve, said faculty adviser and veterinarian Dr. Steve Wadsworth.

Many have other jobs as well and are working at the farm because they have a passion for animals and agriculture, he said.

“These cows as well cared for as any animals in Vermont, maybe any animals in the country,” he said. “These students love these cows to pieces.”

And it shows, as they talk to the cows while guiding them into the milking parlor, or try to move a cow’s leg while attaching the tubes of the automatic milking machine to her teats. They milk the cows twice a day, feed them and the calves, muck the barns and help with births, any time of the day or night.

Amid a pandemic, some workers said they are glad to have meaningful chores and to be with the animals.

The herd manager, Matt Bodette, couldn’t be more grateful. He was inundated with calls and text messages from students and alumni wanting to help or checking in on the farm. Probably 70 to 80 wanted to take up the work, but UVM only needed seven workers.

“They have really, really shined in every single way possible and I am, I will never forget them,” Bodette said, choking up. “They’ve been like a little family for me and I’m truly grateful.”

When the pandemic forced the University of Vermont to close, the alarm spread: What would happen to the cows?