'Heck' they were aggressive

llamedos

New Member
A DEVON farmer who owns Britain's only Nazi cows has been forced to reduce the size of his herd - because they are too aggressive.

The once-extinct Aurochs were brought back to life by Adolf Hitler's scientists in the 1930s after officially dying out 4,000 years ago.

They arrived in Britain for the first time in 2009 when farmer Derek Gow imported 13 'Heck' cattle from Belgium to his Upcott Grange Farm at Lifton near Okehampton.

It was the first time the creatures had set foot on British soil since the Bronze Age.

But Mr Gow, 49, has now been forced to get rid of seven of the cows as he could not handle their "incredibly aggressive" nature.

He said: "We have had to cut out herd down to six because some of them were incredibly aggressive and we just couldn't handle them.

"What the Germans did with their breeding programme was create something truly primeval."

Hitler saw the 'super cows' as a symbol of German and Aryan might and tasked leading geneticists, brothers Heinz and Lutz Heck, to bring the Aurochs ''back into existence''.

The pair traced the species' descendants to domestic breeds and managed to ''pull the wild genes out'' in a Jurassic Park-style experiment.

The Heck's programme at zoos in Berlin and Munich was so successful that the new Aurochs flourished and were used in propaganda material during World War Two.

Dad-of-two Derek says they were shorter than the aurochs, but retain their ancestors' muscular build, deep brown complexion, and shaggy coffee-coloured fringe.

He added: "Importing the cattle has been an interesting project for us - they have such an unusual history.

"There was a thinking around that time that you could selectively breed animals for Aryan characteristics, which were rooted in runes, folklore and legend.

"Heck cattle were the product of an attempt to back-breed using a number of existing older species, including Spanish fighting bulls, Fresians and Simmentals."

The cattle, which have lethal-looking horns and a muscular build, are unlike any modern commercial breed of cow.

They were almost destroyed following the defeat of Nazism in 1945, but some survived after they were shipped to game parks in Western Europe.

Mr Gow said: "As far as being a commercial breed is concerned, they have little value, but they are a significant animal from a conservation point of view.

"For instance, each cow can produce its own weight in dung every year, which is a great source of food for insects and bugs and nutrients for the environment.

"The auroch was extinct, but domestic descendants - Friesians, Simmentals and everything else - were still kicking around the countryside.

''The two brothers argued that if the one wild animal that spawned all of these had gone, through a process of back-breeding domestic cattle, you could pull the wild genes out and recreate the ancestor.

''Between the two wars, there was a thinking that you could selectively breed animals - and indeed people - for Aryan characteristics, for characteristics that were rooted in runes, folklore and legend.''

The half-tonne cattle, 'Bos primigenius', died out in Britain 4,000 years ago but remained widespread across much of Europe until the 1600s.

But they were finally wiped out in 1627 after they were hunted to extinction for their horns, hide and meat.

They were saved in the early 1930s when Hitler wanted to recreate the breed to evoke the power of the ''runes, folklore and legends of the Germanic peoples''.

Heinz and Lutz Heck found their descendants in a cattle from the Scottish Highlands, Corsica and the French Camargue, as well as Spanish fighting bulls.

They then identified the particular auroch gene, which they were able to use to bring them back from the 'dead'.

The cows were later transported to game parks in Schorfheide near Berlin, and the Neander Valley in Dusseldorf.

Derek said: ''The Aurochs were wild bulls. Julius Caesar recorded them as being bulls as big as elephants.

''Young men hunted these bulls as preparation for battle and leadership in war, but also to obtain these huge 6ft-wide horns that the bulls had as drinking vessels and war horns. They were huge trophies.''

Mr Gow said he got rid of some of the cows because they tried to kill his staff.

But because the reserve they came from didn't want them back they have been sent to an abattoir.

He said: ''The ones we had to get rid of would just attack you any chance they could. They would try to kill anyone. Dealing with that was not a lot of fun at all.

"I have worked with a range of different animals from bison to deer and I have never come across anything like these.

"They are by far and away the most aggressive animals I have ever worked with.

"Some were perfectly calm and quiet and they are the ones we have kept. The others you could not go near.

"We made sure no-one went near them so there were never any incidents. To get them into the trailer to get them off the farm we used a young and very athletic young man to stand on the ramp and they charged at him before he quickly jumped out the way.

"They were so aggressive that was the only way. But that was as near as they came. No-one else went anywhere near them.

"When the Germans were selecting them to create this animal they used Spanish fighting cattle to give them the shape and ferocity they wanted.

"The reason the Nazis were so supportive of the project is they wanted them to be fierce and aggressive

"Since they have gone it is all peaceful again. Peace reigns supreme on the farm.

"Despite these problems, I have no regrets at all. It has been a good thing to do and the history of them is fascinating."



Read more: http://www.torquayheraldexpress.co....ory-25806786-detail/story.html?#ixzz3NxLZJ67A
 

RobFZS

Member
telegraph posted it on facebook, some of the comments are comical, problem with social media is it gives every idiot a voice, be it if they've never even touched a cow before they have an opinion on how they should be left alone
 

DrWazzock

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lincolnshire
I am not sure that aggression can be associated with any particular breed, but is a trait that can be reinforced or bred out of any breed.

We had two Jersey milkers years ago, one of which was docile and easy milking, the other from the same mother but a different bull was so aggressive it had to be sent to slaughter.

I would imagine the Heck brothers cast their net around the cattle of Europe and might have ended up producing something that looked the part for what they perceived to be an Auroch. naturally they would have gone for aggressive tendencies. It probably pleased their masters and made for a good story but as far as restoring the pure Auroch line, well that was probably bullocks.
 

adamntitch

New Member
Eh? They had to evacuate the zoo to shoot one beast? IIRC, they were right at the top of the hill and it would have been easy enough to simply seal off that area.
not sure if it was the whole area but they had broken the fence there is a video on youtube you don't see the cattle but can hear people talking about it
 
I am not sure that aggression can be associated with any particular breed, but is a trait that can be reinforced or bred out of any breed.

We had two Jersey milkers years ago, one of which was docile and easy milking, the other from the same mother but a different bull was so aggressive it had to be sent to slaughter.

I would imagine the Heck brothers cast their net around the cattle of Europe and might have ended up producing something that looked the part for what they perceived to be an Auroch. naturally they would have gone for aggressive tendencies. It probably pleased their masters and made for a good story but as far as restoring the pure Auroch line, well that was probably bullocks.
I've never known more than the odd properly aggressive Jersey female, but looking at the info on the web about Heck cattle , the similar and composite breeds mostly have the look of a Jersey about them!:eek:
 

SFI - What % were you taking out of production?

  • 0 %

    Votes: 116 38.4%
  • Up to 25%

    Votes: 115 38.1%
  • 25-50%

    Votes: 42 13.9%
  • 50-75%

    Votes: 6 2.0%
  • 75-100%

    Votes: 5 1.7%
  • 100% I’ve had enough of farming!

    Votes: 18 6.0%

Expanded and improved Sustainable Farming Incentive offer for farmers published

  • 210
  • 1
Expanded Sustainable Farming Incentive offer from July will give the sector a clear path forward and boost farm business resilience.

From: Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs and The Rt Hon Sir Mark Spencer MP Published21 May 2024

s300_Farmland_with_farmFarmland_with_farmhouse_and_grazing_cattle_in_the_UK_Farm_scene__diversification__grazing__rural__beef_GettyImages-165174232.jpg

Full details of the expanded and improved Sustainable Farming Incentive (SFI) offer available to farmers from July have been published by the...
Top