Farmer finds pasture empty, sees all 32 de’ad cows in one big pile

Jared Blackwelder, a farmer from Springfield Missouri, was feeding his dairy cows on Saturday morning with his wife Misty.

The happy couple had no idea this would be the last time they would see the herd al’ive.

Heavy spring rains had caused some flooding recently, but the worst seemed to have passed. Jared and Misty weren’t concerned when they heard some rumbling in the distance.

They left the small herd alone to graze in the pasture until their evening milking. The Blackwelders were devastated when they returned just a few hours later.

After walking through the empty pasture, Blackwelder found all 32 dairy cows de’ad just inside the tree line. The entire herd had been struck by lightning.

The Wright County Missouri Farm Bureau posted images of the dairy cows to their Facebook page asking viewers to pray for the Blackwelders. MFB President Stan Cody told CBS News “it’s a common occurrence. It does happen. The thing that made this the worst was just the sheer number of cows that were affected.” Cody, who raises beef cows, has also lost a cow to lightning. “You’re at the mercy of mother nature,” he said.

After inspecting the cows, a local veterinarian confirmed that lightning was the cause of de’ath. Until now the veterinarian had never seen a lightning strike ki’ll more than 6 cows. He believes the herd was huddled together under the trees seeking shelter from the storm.

Jared was absolutely heartbroken. “It’s not like they are pets. But the ones I’m milking, I’ve raised every one of them,” he said in an interview with the Springfield News-Leader. “Dairy cattle are a little different because you mess with them twice a day. It knocks you hard.”

Each dairy cow was worth somewhere between $2,000 and $2,500. The Blackwelders have estimated the total loss at more than $60,000. They have insurance, but the farmers do not believe it will be enough to cover such an incredible loss.

Cody confirmed that the meat from the cows was unsalvageable. “Those animals are damaged and of course they had been there for a few hours when he found them,” he said. “In processing an animal, there’s a process that needs to be gone through. They wouldn’t have been fit for human consumption.”

Representatives from the local Farm Service Agency have reached out to the MFB. The loss of a herd can break a dairy farm, but the FSA has a Livestock Indemnity Program to help farmers get back on their feet after suffering a natural disaster such as flooding, lightning, or blizzards.

Critics outside of the farming community blamed the Blackwelder for not providing adequate shelter. Cody quickly came to their defense saying that most farmers in Missouri do not have a separate building for their dairy or beef cows. “This was nothing that he had any control over,” Cody said.

Related Posts

The Final Beat: Rob Hirst’s Life in Music, Protest, and the Australian Ocean

Revered Midnight Oil co-founder and iconic drummer Rob Hirst has died after a three-year battle with pancreatic cancer, leaving behind an immense legacy. The global music community…

The Dark Line in Shrimp Explained: What It Really Is—and Why Cooks Argue About Removing It

That dark streak isn’t a vein at all, but the shrimp’s digestive tract—its intestine, often filled with whatever it ate: algae, plankton, and tiny particles from its…

Fetterman, Other Dems Break Ranks On Shutdown: ‘Sends Wrong Message’

Fetterman’s defiance slices straight through the usual party script. By backing a Republican stopgap bill, he signaled that keeping the government open matters more than scoring ideological…

G.W. Bush Teams With Democrats To Denounce Trump’s USAID Cuts

The quiet alliance between George W. Bush and Barack Obama over USAID is less about nostalgia and more about a brutal reckoning with what America chooses to…

ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel under fire again

Kimmel’s latest monologue unfolded like a political thriller disguised as comedy. From 6,000 miles away, Trump’s allies at the FCC invoked an 80‑year‑old “equal opportunities” rule, signaling…

New Approval Ratings Reveal How Americans Really Feel About Trump’s Second Term

Trump’s second term has become a clash between spectacle and sentiment, between what is proclaimed from the podium and what people actually feel in their lives. He…