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Other side by Ivan Donn Carswell
The dung was recent, not an event unusual in itself but difficult to explain of cows grazing the other side of the fence. Too new to be dismissed without a thought, disturbing evidence which brought a desired state of bovine restraint into an irksome disgrace. We couldn’t see a beast ranging free, eating and defecating on the run, a spirited debate arose implicating any one anonymous member of the species, not necessarily a resident, perhaps a passing vagrant who ate, shat and quit the orchard before the rising sun. Or you might suppose that was the case when all your cattle are accounted for, grazing innocently where they’re meant to be. And it goes to show the first mistake one makes in branding cattle dumb, they’re social beasts, preferring company, but given opportunity and a temporary gate will make the boldest moves from subtly suppressed but promising intelligence. So one, or maybe two had forced the fence, ah, temporary gate, ate some grass, deposited dung, meandered back to the herd before they could be sprung. And they will do it all again until the rest decide the grass is greener on the other side of the temporary gate, ah, fence. © I.D. Carswell
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