12-11-2009, 12:09 AM
[SIZE="3"]Dubbed âMosesâ by neighborhood kids, young calf inspires hope.[/SIZE]
The month: December. The place: A humble farm. The setting: Just perfect for an auspicious event.
On a cold, dark night in the wee hours of the morning, a baby calf was born. His nurturing mother, Fuzzy, welcomed him into the world by licking and licking his head â an act that obscured a special detail about the little guy that would soon generate headlines all over the planet.
âWhen we first saw the calf ... the mother had licked the hair and it was all sideways and we thought it was a regular calf,â recalled Connecticut dairy farmer Brad Davis. âThen a little later on in the morning we went in and there it was, standing right out. It was really quite a sight.â
âItâ was none other than the distinctive markings of a white cross on the newborn calfâs forehead. The image had quite an effect on Davis, Davisâ relatives and friends and families all around the dairy farm.
âThe first night that he was here, when we shut the lights out that night late at night, the only thing you could see in here was that cross showing in the dark,â Davis told the local Norwich Bulletin newspaper. âIt was really quite a feeling. It made the hair stand up on the back of my neck, actually.â
Davisâ 70-year-old father, Andrew Gallup Davis, told the Bulletin that heâs never seen a pattern like this on any of the thousands of calves heâs encountered in his lifetime.
âItâs not one you look at and you try to make something out of it,â he said. âItâs pronounced.â
Visions, visions everywhere
Maybe itâs the season, or maybe itâs something in the water, but people have been seeing religious images in the most unlikely places in recent weeks â and not just on the heads of baby calves. A sampling:
* Also this month, a couple in the Fort Worth, Texas, area said one of their hens laid an egg bearing the image of a cross on it. The egg was unusual â not smooth like all the others â and it had an indentation on one end with what appeared to be a cross. The couple, Pam and Tracy Norrell, said they believe itâs a sign of encouragement during the holiday season. (They added that eating the egg is not an option.)
Late last month, a Massachusetts woman who recently separated from her husband and had her hours cut at work said an image of Jesus Christ she discovered on the bottom of her iron reassured her that âlife is going to be good.â The woman, Mary Jo Coady, said she planned to store the special iron in a closet and buy a new one.
In October, an Ikea furniture store in Glasgow, Scotland, made headlines when some shoppers thought they saw the face of Jesus on the wooden door of the menâs restroom. âIt takes you by surprise. It is really clear in the wood,â one shopper told the U.K.âs Telegraph newspaper. âI was only heading to the toilet and found God. My wife thought he looked like Gandalf from âLord of the Rings,â but it is definitely more like the Turin Shroud.â
So whatâs the deal with stories like these? Are such accounts simply bizarre? Funny? Deeply meaningful to the people who see the images â especially if theyâre enduring tough times?
Basically, theyâre all of the above.
Davis, the dairy farmer, told WFSB-TV he thinks the special marking on the baby calf may be a message from on high, although heâs still trying to figure out what that message might be.
He told the Bulletin that he hopes the image might mean milk prices will go up and the dairy industry will improve.
âThe last couple of years have been the toughest probably ever,â Davis said.
âNot totally surprisingâ
Neighborhood children have become enamored with the little calf with the special marking on his forehead. They decided to bestow upon him a biblical â albeit Old Testament â name: Moses.
The calf is living in Sterling, a small Connecticut town on the Rhode Island border, on Buttercup Farm, a dairy operation Davis co-owns with Megan Johnson.
Johnson said Fuzzy, Mosesâ mother, is a red-and-white Holstein cow, and Ferdinand, his father, is a Jersey. Both Fuzzy and Ferdinand have the reputation of being exceptionally friendly animals. Davis thinks the pair produced an exceptional calf.
âHeâs got a different disposition from other calves. You can see it in his eyes,â Davis said. âHe has a very kind look in his eyes. Like he has something he wants to say to you.â
Ric Grummer, chairman of the department of dairy science at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, told the Bulletin that itâs common for Holsteins to have white markings on their heads.
âI think what this is really ending up being is a coincidence,â Grummer said. âSometimes that marking is in the shape of a triangle. Sometimes that marking may be very irregularly shaped. ... Clearly, if you get a nice unique cross, itâs unique, but itâs not totally surprising that something like this would happen.â
Saved by the cross?
Dairy farm owners Brad Davis and Megan Johnson say they'll do everything they can to help Moses enjoy a long, happy life.
Johnson said she and Davis will see to it that Moses the calf lives a long, happy life.
âWeâre going to make sure he gets a good life and doesnât get eaten,â Johnson told the Bulletin.
âWeâd like to find him a good home where he can live out the rest of his life on pastures, you know, with somebody who cares for him.â
Davis quickly chimed in.
âWe may get attached to him in the meantime, like we have with other animals here,â he said. âAnd he may stay here.â
The month: December. The place: A humble farm. The setting: Just perfect for an auspicious event.
On a cold, dark night in the wee hours of the morning, a baby calf was born. His nurturing mother, Fuzzy, welcomed him into the world by licking and licking his head â an act that obscured a special detail about the little guy that would soon generate headlines all over the planet.
âWhen we first saw the calf ... the mother had licked the hair and it was all sideways and we thought it was a regular calf,â recalled Connecticut dairy farmer Brad Davis. âThen a little later on in the morning we went in and there it was, standing right out. It was really quite a sight.â
âItâ was none other than the distinctive markings of a white cross on the newborn calfâs forehead. The image had quite an effect on Davis, Davisâ relatives and friends and families all around the dairy farm.
âThe first night that he was here, when we shut the lights out that night late at night, the only thing you could see in here was that cross showing in the dark,â Davis told the local Norwich Bulletin newspaper. âIt was really quite a feeling. It made the hair stand up on the back of my neck, actually.â
Davisâ 70-year-old father, Andrew Gallup Davis, told the Bulletin that heâs never seen a pattern like this on any of the thousands of calves heâs encountered in his lifetime.
âItâs not one you look at and you try to make something out of it,â he said. âItâs pronounced.â
Visions, visions everywhere
Maybe itâs the season, or maybe itâs something in the water, but people have been seeing religious images in the most unlikely places in recent weeks â and not just on the heads of baby calves. A sampling:
* Also this month, a couple in the Fort Worth, Texas, area said one of their hens laid an egg bearing the image of a cross on it. The egg was unusual â not smooth like all the others â and it had an indentation on one end with what appeared to be a cross. The couple, Pam and Tracy Norrell, said they believe itâs a sign of encouragement during the holiday season. (They added that eating the egg is not an option.)
Late last month, a Massachusetts woman who recently separated from her husband and had her hours cut at work said an image of Jesus Christ she discovered on the bottom of her iron reassured her that âlife is going to be good.â The woman, Mary Jo Coady, said she planned to store the special iron in a closet and buy a new one.
In October, an Ikea furniture store in Glasgow, Scotland, made headlines when some shoppers thought they saw the face of Jesus on the wooden door of the menâs restroom. âIt takes you by surprise. It is really clear in the wood,â one shopper told the U.K.âs Telegraph newspaper. âI was only heading to the toilet and found God. My wife thought he looked like Gandalf from âLord of the Rings,â but it is definitely more like the Turin Shroud.â
So whatâs the deal with stories like these? Are such accounts simply bizarre? Funny? Deeply meaningful to the people who see the images â especially if theyâre enduring tough times?
Basically, theyâre all of the above.
Davis, the dairy farmer, told WFSB-TV he thinks the special marking on the baby calf may be a message from on high, although heâs still trying to figure out what that message might be.
He told the Bulletin that he hopes the image might mean milk prices will go up and the dairy industry will improve.
âThe last couple of years have been the toughest probably ever,â Davis said.
âNot totally surprisingâ
Neighborhood children have become enamored with the little calf with the special marking on his forehead. They decided to bestow upon him a biblical â albeit Old Testament â name: Moses.
The calf is living in Sterling, a small Connecticut town on the Rhode Island border, on Buttercup Farm, a dairy operation Davis co-owns with Megan Johnson.
Johnson said Fuzzy, Mosesâ mother, is a red-and-white Holstein cow, and Ferdinand, his father, is a Jersey. Both Fuzzy and Ferdinand have the reputation of being exceptionally friendly animals. Davis thinks the pair produced an exceptional calf.
âHeâs got a different disposition from other calves. You can see it in his eyes,â Davis said. âHe has a very kind look in his eyes. Like he has something he wants to say to you.â
Ric Grummer, chairman of the department of dairy science at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, told the Bulletin that itâs common for Holsteins to have white markings on their heads.
âI think what this is really ending up being is a coincidence,â Grummer said. âSometimes that marking is in the shape of a triangle. Sometimes that marking may be very irregularly shaped. ... Clearly, if you get a nice unique cross, itâs unique, but itâs not totally surprising that something like this would happen.â
Saved by the cross?
Dairy farm owners Brad Davis and Megan Johnson say they'll do everything they can to help Moses enjoy a long, happy life.
Johnson said she and Davis will see to it that Moses the calf lives a long, happy life.
âWeâre going to make sure he gets a good life and doesnât get eaten,â Johnson told the Bulletin.
âWeâd like to find him a good home where he can live out the rest of his life on pastures, you know, with somebody who cares for him.â
Davis quickly chimed in.
âWe may get attached to him in the meantime, like we have with other animals here,â he said. âAnd he may stay here.â


![[-]](http://talkhorror.com/boards/themes/dim/collapse.png)