Danniel, record-breaking steer

Danniel is 6ft 4in tall (Photo: David Johnson/Barcroft Images)

(By Natalya Estrada, Times Standard News, 10/19/16) EUREKA, California – Humboldt County’s record-breaking steer, Danniel the Holstein has found his forever home at Lost Coast Hay in Eureka. Previously, Danniel was living in a temporary pasture at the Sequoia Park Zoo for the summer as owners Ken and Ann Farley searched for a place for him to stay permanently.

“We think it is a good fit,” Ann Farley said Wednesday night. “We are excited he is staying local.”

The steer was measured in September and has unofficially been confirmed by Ferndale veterinarian Dr. Kevin Silver as the world’s tallest bovine ever recorded at 6 feet 4 inches. He measured just over an inch taller than the current Guinness World Record holder, Blosom, who was owned by Patricia Meads-Hanson in Orangeville, Illinois. Blosom died last May at the age of 13.

Blosom

Blosom

Danniel’s story could have turned out a lot different if his owners weren’t the Farleys, who said a lot of male Holsteins don’t make it to adulthood. Usually female Holsteins are dairy cows, the males are typically slaughtered for beef. In September, Ken Farley told the Times-Standard that having Danniel here was special and that the steer was part of his family. Having seen Danniel grow from a calf to a giant, Farley said he was still impressed by the steer’s size.

“It’s pretty exciting for Humboldt County,” Ken Farley said. ”And we’re a big dairy community, so having him be a Holstein really fits right in with the area.”

Lost Coast Hay assistant manager Amber Heidinger said Danniel is set to move in at the end of this week and the giant steer will have a lot of space to graze.

“We’re getting ready for him. He has a great big pasture and we’re also building him a covered shelter for when it rains,” Heidinger said. She also said people can come see the giant steer free of charge once he’s settled and that Lost Coast Hay took Danniel on a permanent loan so he cannot be sold in the future.

“Basically, the zoo was looking for a place for him and the owner wanted him to stay in Humboldt. So, now he’s moving here,” Heidinger said.

Seqouia Park Zoo Director Gretchen Ziegler said the zoo wouldn’t be able to keep Danniel for the rainy season because of limited space. She said animals like Danniel, because of their immense size and consumption, need several acres of grass to roam and the pasture they had wasn’t enough to sustain him and the yaks they currently have.

She also said the biggest padding they had for the steer wouldn’t grow enough grass for him to graze on. Ziegler said the zoo helped the Farleys identify possible places for his relocation and feel that Danniel will be happier now that he’ll have more room to roam in a more natural environment.

Before his brief stay at the zoo, Danniel lived at Ken Farley’s aunt’s farm on Redmond Road off Old Arcata Road.

“The temporary situation was fine and a lot of the staff became really attached to him because of his engaging personality,” Ziegler said. “We’re sad to see him go but also happy he’s moving on to greener pastures.”


Texas garbage man and 2-year-old boy share special friendship

(CBS News, 11/15/16) PLANO, Texas – Every Monday, like clockwork, two-year-old Lance gets ready for trash day, CBS Dallas-Fort Worth reported.

Lance Rufus dressed as garbage man (Photo: CBS Dallas-Fort Worth)

Lance Rufus dressed as garbage man (Photo: CBS Dallas-Fort Worth)

The Plano toddler wheels his mini recycling bin to the curb, dressed as his buddy, James Jackson the trash man.

Lance waits with a quiet smile, as the familiar rumble and squeak of the city garbage truck fills the alley by his house.

It’s a unique friendship formed nearly a year and a half ago, when the Rufus family moved into the neighborhood where Jackson picks up the trash.

Four years on the job, and now Jackson has a new sidekick.

“It’s like, Lance is eating breakfast, he hears it, he stops and says, ‘Garbage truck!’ We have to get him out of the high chair and run to the back. I really love it,” said Lance’s mom Chantal Rufus.

The friendship between the toddler and Jackson quickly blossomed. Jackson even gave his buddy a “City of Plano” toy bank. Lance hasn’t been able to put it down.

“It makes it sweet when you see someone who really likes what you do,” laughed Jackson.

Lance’s parents dressed him up as Jackson for Halloween.

Chantal and Garrett made a tiny recycling bin, and a matching reflective vest.

The friendship is warming hearts, and it’s only a matter of days until the friends see each other again.


Domino’s testing out pizza delivery by reindeer in Japan

(by Ben Hooper, UPI, 11/23/16) ISHIKARI, Japan – The Japanese arm of pizza chain Domino’s announced it is testing an unusual solution to winter weather difficulties — delivery by reindeer.

dominos-testing-out-pizza-delivery-by-reindeer-in-japan

Domino’s Japan announced it is currently testing out the possibility of using riderless reindeer to deliver pizzas in the snowy north of the country amid expectations of a particularly harsh winter.

The company released pictures showing how the pizza warmers mounted to the reindeer’s backs would work, as well as photos of reindeer training to be pizza-delivery deer on the grounds of a driving school in the icy city of Ishikari, Hokkaido.

A video posted to YouTube by Domino’s Japan shows how the reindeer deliveries would work and how the company would use GPS trackers to follow the progress of the deliveries. The video reveals the plan still has some kinks, such as ensuring the pizza warmers remain affixed to the reindeer and preventing the animals from wandering dangerously into roads.

The company said it is still working on some other issues with the scheme, including ensuring the safety of any people or animals who encounter the reindeer and determining how the reindeer would be trained to walk long distances without accompaniment.

Watch a Japanese report (no translation):