Dayton Daily News

Move over, therapy dogs. Hello, therapy ... cows?

- By Elisa Mala © 2019 New York Times News Service

Even withNAPLES, N.Y. — out a psychology degree, Bella’s natural talents made her an excellent therapist: She is calm and accommodat­ing of a range of personalit­ies, with the patience to listen to endless problems without so much as a judgmental moo.

From a lush, secluded pasture on the Mountain Horse Farm, a 33-acre bed-andbreakfa­st in the Finger Lakes region of New York, 3-yearold Bella and 2-year-old Bonnie are the highlander-angus crossbred cows that provide animal-based therapy.

Cow cuddling, as the practice is called, invites interactio­n with the farm animals via brushing, petting or heartfelt chats with the bovines. The experience is similar to equine therapy, with one game-changing difference: Horses tend to stand, but cows spontane- ously lie down in the grass while chewing their cud, allowing humans to get even more up close and personal by joining on the ground and offering a warm embrace.

As more people are turning to a variety of animals — dogs, ducks, alligators — for their mental health, states are cracking down on how and when therapy animals can be used. But cows? You can’t take them with you.

“Can you see how quiet she gets?” said Suzanne Vullers, 51, an accountant turned equine therapist who co-owns the bed-andbreakfa­st with her husband, Rudi Vullers, also 51. “That’s what we’re looking for,” she said. “For the person and the cow.”

Hailing from the rural town of Reuver, in the Netherland­s, the pair came across “koe knuffelen,” which means “cow hugging” in Dutch, on a return visit to their home- land two years ago.

In parts of the Netherland­s, cow cuddling is offered as part of half-day visits, and is part of an larger move- ment to connect people with country life. In the major urban center of Rotterdam, a newly opened floating dairy farm in the city’s oldest port invites city dwellers to visit the beasts.

About a decade earlier, in 2007, the couple — he a former supply chain manager, she a former accountant — traded their corporate lives to set up their farming shop in Naples, (Population: 2,500. Claim to fame: a grape festival that takes place in the fall, with a competitio­n for grape pie.) The idea of cow cuddling opened the barn gates.

In May of 2018, they purchased Bonnie and Bella, selecting them for their gentle personalit­ies and lack of horns. “A lot of cows are not suited for it,” Rudi Vullers said. ”They can chase you out of the field.”

Hourlong cow cuddling sessions, priced at $75 per couple for the hour, are capped at two a day, with a maximum of four participan­ts per session.

“It’s not petting zoo,” said Rudi Vullers, though the animals are indeed pets in a sense — they aren’t production animals, and they’re not raised for beef or dairy. “These girls get to live a natural life,” Suzanne Vullers said.

Each session is overseen by two human counterpar­ts: an equine therapist, usually Suzanne Vullers, who can read the animals’ moods to ensure a safe, positive interactio­n with their new human friends, and a second handler, who keeps a watchful eye on the other animals in the field.

Neither has a psychology degree, which is kind of the point: “Whatever they’re going through, they don’t have to talk about it,” she said. “It’s not like therapy, right?”

Like other forms of ther- apy, the hope is for visitors to foster trust, empathy and connection with the cows and their own emotions. And as with any other kind of therapy, there are no guaran- tees of successful outcomes: “They’re not trained to lie down,” she said.

On a recent Saturday, two pairs of people, an engaged couple from Silicon Valley and a mother-daughter duo from upstate New York, had traveled from opposite sides of the country to cuddle some cows.

“Drive five hours to hug a cow?” said Karen Hudson, 57, a constructi­on company manager, who attended the afternoon session with her daughter, Jessica Ercoli, 27, a probation officer.

For Hudson, it was a sort of wish fulfillmen­t, a throwback to the fond memories of visiting her grandmothe­r’s farm. And perhaps a bit of fate, too. The email address she has used for over two decades includes the words “Missy,” which happens to be the name of miniature horse on the farm, and “moo.”

Leading the two excited but tentative women onto the field, Suzanne Vullers offered guidance on a successful approach before demonstrat­ing the methods her- self. “O posture, not X posture,” she said. “Round the body” to appear less threat- ening. Walk up to the cow’s shoulders rather than its haunches.

“Clothing is important,” Rudi Vullers said. “They might slobber on you.” (Def- inite requiremen­t: closedtoe shoes.)

For observers: “Stand sideways. It makes a world of dif- ference to them,” Suzanne Vullers said.

Advice for participan­ts: “Respect them and their world and what they want to do and what they want to give you,” she added.

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