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Cows absolutely adore accordion music 4K UHD,Pets & Animals,yt:quality=high,cows,milk,accordion,concertina,girl,serenade,Girl plays a Concertina for cows, resulting in cows showing up to watch her play the acorrdion. I have heard, from various accounts, that cows like to be played music and some farmers even believe it promotes milk production. This makes me wonder if it is a good idea to play music to The Milking Parlour cow when we have the show? (I haven’t found her yet, although I am close, hence why she doesn’t yet have a name). Serenading cows is no new idea: The Ingenues all-girl band, and vaudeville act (photo to the left), serenaded cows at the University of Wisconsin, Madison’s dairy barn in 1930, as part of an experiment to see whether the soothing strains of music boosted the cows’ milk production. The Coast Symphony Orchestra playing to a herd cows. More recently… the photo on the right shows the Coast Symphony Orchestra Music Director and Conductor Edette Gagné leading a quartet of classically-trained musicians in a warm-up performance for dairy cows at the Valedoorn Dairy Farm in Agassiz, B.C. The musicians are the “opening act” for the BC Dairy Association’s “Music Makes More Milk” contest, launching October 10, in which members of the public are invited to compose songs for cows in order to naturally increase milk production. Stress can inhibit the release of oxytocin — a hormone key to the milk-releasing process. So the happiness of cows is very much on the minds of farmers. The California dairy industry even declared “Happy cheese comes from happy cows” as part of their Real California Milk Campaign. So how is a farmer to balance the needs of the herd with that of her business? The answer may be as simple as switching on the radio. Read more. Cows make more milk when listening to slow jams… A report in Modern Farmer links a study by the University of Leicester that found that slow music can mitigate stress in cows and increase the amount of milk they produce by 3% with anecdotal evidence from several dairy corporations. “In terms of music, in my 30 years working with dairy cows, I have found that music can be beneficial to the well-being of the cows, but it must be consistent and calming,” said Juan Velez, executive vice president of Aurora Organic Farms. Read more. Moo-sic to their ears: Matthew Jones a Welsh dairy farmer from near Wrexham. Photo: Daily Mirror Matthew Jones a Welsh dairy farmer from near Wrexham. Photo: Daily Mirror The more I research, the more I learn just how many farmers out there are playing to their cows. It even made it into the Daily Mirror… It’s not un-MOO-sual: Welsh cows ‘produce better milk’ listening to Tom Jones songs… Thirty farmers who provide milk for a dairy in Wrexham have been serenading their 500 Friesians with classics including Delilah and She’s a Lady. Farmers who have been playing the veteran singer’s popular tunes from It’s Not Unusual to the Green Green Grass of Home to dairy herds reckon milk production has soared by up to 5% and it tastes better. Read more. Serenading in China… A musician plays to two rows of dairy cows on a cow farm in a village near city Luoyang, central China’s Henan Province. 2007. While it seems incredible to play music to cows, breeder Guo Zhixin actually hires a musician to play music to his dairy cows for one hour every morning, saying beautiful meledies can make his cows produce more milk. Guo, who raises 860 cows on his farm in a village near city Luoyang, central China’s Henan Province, says playing music to cows brings forth one more kilo of milk from every cow, every day, resulting in 700 yuan’s more worth of milk every year, reported chinanews.com on Monday. Read more. And this is just delightful… Serenading the cattle with my trombone
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