Image licensed under CC BY 2.0 by steve p2008 on Flickr
An 82-year-old cyclist who was rammed by an “out of control” cow, which then attempted to sit on him, was saved after a passer-by used the victim’s bike to fend off the rampaging animal.
The incident, which also saw the cow pitch another man headfirst into brambles, occurred on a towpath between Lymington and Keyhaven in Hampshire on Monday.
According to the Lymington Times, the cow, along with its calf, had escaped from a nearby field. Seemingly unaware of the agitated nature of the animal, which was attempting to protect its young, the cyclist continued on his way along the path.
As the cyclist passed, the cow charged at him, throwing him from his bike and cutting his legs in the process. The animal then attempted to sit on the injured pensioner.
Fearing that the cyclist was about to be crushed, 67-year-old Geoff Morton bravely began to use the man’s bike as a shield to coax the cow away.
> “Pissed-off zebra” chases after cyclist… in California
“It was as scary as hell. I honestly thought that the man was going to die – and possibly me too,” Geoff told the local newspaper.
“The cow was black and must have weighed a ton at least. It was a big beast. I know it was only protecting its calf, but it was out of control.
“I was walking my dog when I first saw it and stopped. Behind me were two young women, one with a baby.
“We all stood really still and quiet. But unfortunately, the man on the bike didn’t understand what was happening and rode near the cow. It started pawing the ground, like a bull does in a bullfight, then suddenly charged broadside at him.
“His bike went up in the air and came down on top of him. The cow then sat on him, before lying on him. I thought it was going to crush him to death.”
Geoff continued: “I could hear the cyclist groaning and he looked in a very bad way. He had very serious lacerations on his legs.
“There was a sort of stand-off between me and the cow before it turned and ran off towards Keyhaven with its calf.”
> Cyclist stops mid ride to save cow's life - by delivering her calf
The distressed animal then reportedly attacked another cow before ramming a walker who had been standing at the edge of the path. The cow then entered the garden of a nearby house, where passers-by were able to block it in using their cars, as they waited for the emergency services to arrive.
The cyclist was taken away in an ambulance to be treated. His injuries are currently unknown.
“I don’t blame the animal, it was just an unfortunate thing to happen,” Geoff added. “The whole experience really shook me up, I was shaking all day. It has put me off using that path and I think I will be very wary when I next come across a cow.
“I hope the man it hit is okay. It must have been so terrifying for him.”
As we have seen on numerous occasions on road.cc, though mostly involving bears in North America, cycling near large, agitated animals can have disastrous consequences.
On Saturday, we reported that a cyclist in California was lucky to escape from a “pissed off” zebra who, after escaping from a ranch, began to run at the bike rider on a road in the coastal town of Carpinteria. Fortunately for the cyclist, the zebra tripped and fell before it was able to catch him.
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28 comments
Minor correction for your headline. It's not a tow path, it's a gravel cycle path bordered by fields.
I'll raise your bovine incident: https://twitter.com/Independent/status/1537004485746253825?s=20&t=NBvWma...
On average 5 people per year are killed by cows in the UK. Must make them one of the most dangerous animals you're likely to meet!
About 5 times more dangerous than cyclists? But probably not as many as are killed by drivers or pedestrians?
I call for testing, licencing and insurance on all cows now, they don't even pay tax!
No mad cow joke? Too soon?
Ah, well played comments section.. well played indeed
Ewe did not dissapoint.
ok joking aside for a moment, do not go anywhere near a cow with calf at this time of year, they will protect them more aggressively than a bull would,and will charge anything they perceive to be a threat to their calf, people have been killed by cows protecting their young, its basically having an argument with nearly a tonne of animal that will trample you to death given the chance.
Doesn't sound much different to riding on the road.
well I was trying not to draw the so obvious parallels, but take from it what you will
Absolutely, I'm ultra careful around cows ever since my brother-in-law was attacked while out running with his dog (on a lead) near his cottage in the Lake District; a route he'd taken many times before (public right of way), the herd suddenly took exception to the dog* and trampled him, breaking his leg, ribs and giving him some serious head injuries, he only managed to escape by hurling himself, broken leg and all, over a fence and down an embankment to a road where someone found him and he was airlifted to hospital. Terrifying.
*She was fine - he had the presence of mind to unclip her lead from his waist as he went down to let her escape but she refused to leave his side, bless her.
Must have been udderly frightening for the cyclist.
Wonder what its beef was?
Terrible story but I know many here reading this were floating this in their head "whatta guy, I hope Im still cycling at age 82!"
Phew! So not another story about Sherrilyn Speid?
Am I the only one that is getting a bit fed up with the cow vs cyclist narrative constantly being pushed?
To be fair to the cow she did indicate for the cyclist to moo've over...
A story for GCN's Si Richardson
There should be some law about cows being fitted with bells if their horns don't work
Udderly sensible suggestion.
I can see the comment thread pun squad is going to milk this one for all it's worth.
An unfortunate misunderstanding - someone told the cow that cyclists like to wear jerseys...
You'd butter believe it.
You're milking this.
Edit - Holy Cow, well and truly ninja'd. Must learn to type quicker.
Cream of the the comments, noted in the dairy.
Cud of been a lot worse. Pat on the head to the byrestander who herd the commotion and mooved the cow on.
Been ruminating on this one for a while, but all the puns I could come up with were complete tripe.
Udder bullocks
I've been chewing over this for ages and still can't come up with anything, so I'll kick it into the long grass and hoof it.