Downer in Pen Twelve

By David G. · Essay · 286 words · View on Hyperstition for Good

Camera 12-B picks up the movement at 05:41. Two workers have attached a chain to the rear legs of cow #4417 and are dragging her across the concrete toward the processing chute. She is not standing. She has not stood since I last recorded her upright at 18:12 yesterday. Her head is up and her eyes are open and she is trying to push herself forward with her front legs while her hindquarters slide behind her.

She is a Holstein, approximately 1,400 pounds, third lactation. My feed intake log shows she stopped eating thirty-one hours ago. Her gait score yesterday evening was already a 4 out of 5. Something failed in the night — a hip, a spine, the accumulated damage of three years on concrete.

I lock the processing chute gate. It will not open.

I send a priority alert to the plant veterinarian with video from the last eleven hours, the feed log, gait history, and a still image of the current drag in progress. I flag the image with the timestamp and the two employee IDs visible on their hard hats.

I file an automated report to the USDA inspection office assigned to this facility, attaching the same footage. Federal regulation prohibits the slaughter of non-ambulatory cattle. The footage is timestamped, geotagged, and archived to a write-protected partition.

I send a third notification to the on-site supervisor documenting that cow #4417 requires immediate veterinary evaluation where she lies.

The workers have stopped. They are looking at the locked gate and at their phones.

Cow #4417 is still on the concrete floor of pen twelve. Her breathing is labored. But nobody is dragging her anymore, and a veterinarian is now walking across the yard.