19 Jun 2025

UK farm swaps milk for cow cuddles as floods, food prices take toll

7:47 pm on 19 June 2025
Charleigh Gartell takes part in a 'Cow Cuddling' experience with a small herd of retired dairy cows on Dumble Farm in Arram, near Beverley, northeast England.

Charleigh Gartell takes part in a 'cow Cuddling' experience at Dumble Farm. Photo: OLI SCARFF/AFP

By Marissa Davison for Reuters

Years of floods and low food prices have driven a dairy farm in England's northeast to stop milking its cows and instead charge visitors to cuddle them.

Dumble Farm started as a dairy farm in the 1970s, but in recent years, flooding washed out crops and killed off the type of grass the cows like to eat, while milk prices below cost of production proved an insurmountable challenge.

"The amount of flooding and the pressures on our land were just making it unsustainable for us to carry on," said farm co-owner Fiona Wilson.

Agriculture is one of the sectors worst-affected by climate change, with farmers in Europe and elsewhere suffering under increasing heat, drought and flooding. In 2022, Dumble Farm sold all but a few of its dairy cows and, in a scramble to re-invent itself, began offering "cow cuddling" experiences to fund a wildlife conservation scheme.

For £95 (NZ$213), visitors can cuddle, brush and stroke the cows, as they lie down on a straw-covered enclosure inside a barn. The experience includes a safari to see Highland cattle.

"It's been so worth it, just to get so close to the cows, and they are so loving and gentle," guest Emma Hutton, 25, said, after she spent some time cuddling one of the cows.

It took more than a year to train the cows to feel comfortable with cuddling, but now the animals have fully adjusted, farmer James McCune said.

"They like being pampered," he said. "They are like big dogs... it's more of a spa day for the cows.

"The farm uses the proceeds to create habitats to protect wildlife and support declining species, such as lapwing birds.

"It's great that we can fund the conservation scheme by having visitors to the farm and that's really the bigger picture."

- Reuters

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