Search

Search Type:

Today's News and Humor
Strange Retirement Options
The Personality Test
Strange "Guyness" Quotient Test
State of West Virginia Professional Engineer Exam
Strange Signs on Church Property



Special Images and Pictures
SF - D - MISC FARM STUFF - FITS NOT CATEGORY
SF - B - FARM BUILDINGS - BARNS - SILOS - CHICKEN COOPS - STABLES
SF - A - FARMERS - FARM WIVES - HIRED HANDS
SF - G - FARM ANIMALS - CRITTERS - GOOD & BAD - RABBITS - BUNNIES - FOX - COYOTE - MISC.
SF - F - FARM ANIMALS - FOWL - CHICKENS - ROOSTERS - DUCKS - GEESE - DUCKLINGS - TURKEYS


Strange Survey
THE BEST SEASON FOR BEING A FARMER IS:
 ALL OF THEM - THEY ARE ALL GREAT!
 FALL - WHEN THE CROPS COME IN - HARVEST
 SPRING - WHEN EVERYTHING IS NEW
 SUMMER - EVERYTHING IS GROWING
 WINTER - TOO COLD TO PLOW!
 
View Previous Surveys



Strange Cow Milking Stunt OVER St. Louis! - Fresh Milk Cartons Parachute Down!

February 17th, 1930, was the first flight by a cow in an airplane. The milk that was produced by the cow during the flight was put into containers and parachuted over the city of St. Louis.


Mooooon Over Missouri

If you think the spin doctors for major advertisers come up with some pretty wild stuff today, consider what their kind of schtick would have been like 75 years ago.

On Feb.18, 1930, during the St. Louis fair in Missouri, someone got the bright idea of a special milk delivery. They were going to put the first cow onto a plane, and milk her while up there. In the interests of science of course, to see if the flight actually affected her milk production.

Elm Farm Ollie, known locally as Nellie Jay, was a placid, two-year old Guernsey cow, said to give six gallons of milk daily in three milkings. So poor Nellie was fed, milked in the morning and then loaded aboard the plane.

The plane circled the St. Louis fair grounds, while an unnamed farmer milked the apparently undisturbed cow. But that wasn't the end of it. The stunt was going to be milked for all it was worth. They packaged her produce in paper cartons, with little parachutes, and dropped them from the plane to her adoring fans below.

After that one famous flight, Nellie retired to Bismarck's Sunnymede Farms where she had been born, and died at the ripe old age of ten.
 





 

The Strange Family




© 2009 StrangeCosmos.com
Read our Privacy Policy
Photography

StrangeCosmos.com StrangeVehicles.com StrangeZoo.com StrangePolitics.com StrangePersons.com
StrangeSports.com StrangeCelebrities.com StrangeMilitary.com StrangeDangers.com StrangePolice.com
StrangeBusiness.com StrangeFunKidz.com StrangeTravel.com StrangeAmericans.com StrangeFarmer.com
StrangeCollege.com StrangeOldePictures.com StrangeRacer.com StrangeBlondes.com  

Disclaimer: We do our best to avoid copyrighted material. If anything on this site has been copyrighted by you, please contact us so we can remove it or give you credit!