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What I also remember is how small and black/grey they were, with a kind of muddy Rastafarian look on the hair front - my fairly tiny aunt was taller. They were obviously desperate to do whatever pleased her, though they spent a long time looking stupid and staring while they slowly, but affectionately, wondered what on earth she had in mind. They were more like very large slow goats, or maybe incontinent poodles, than cattle. She also showed me where they used to come indoors, if the mood took them, where there was now a kitchen - 'since the electricity' and apparently that used to warm her bedroom above so effectively that it was often so hot she had to leave all the windows and doors open in winter...
My aunts' father used to bleed his cattle in winter to make blood sausages, which apparently didn't bother them, but my aunt didn't like that much, and didn't do it. I suspect she was too fond of 'em.
The scones and potato cakes and butter she made with their milk were unforgettable. One buttered scone and even a five year old had to go and lie down.
When I returned to the Highlands, many years later, you can imagine how I began to doubt my sanity when a glorious blow-dried golden creature, three times the size of those I remembered, was pointed out to me as a Highland cow. It looked to me like any old cow. Nice enough, but fairly dull. No spark of intelligence or curiousity in the eyes. No one in the car believed me when I told them that wasn't a proper Highland cow - and, of course, I have since learnt they were right.
As you know it is my ambition, in the middle of France, to help keep the crofters domestic variety alive - who knows when they may be needed again?’
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