Georgia woman captures surprise visit by dairy cows on security video: Udderly ridiculous!
A woman in Warner Robins, Georgia, couldn't believe what showed up on her home security system in the middle of the night
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Alisha Cooper of Warner Robins, Georgia, had an unusual group of visitors show up outside her new home recently.
It was all caught on video — and the images and story behind it offer a lighter moment for anyone curious about what some sophisticated home security systems can pick up these days (or nights!) when people least expect it.
Holy cow
"I have the Ring chime indoors because my phone is constantly on silent," said Cooper.
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"And at about 3 a.m. one night recently, the chime started going off and woke me up."
"I'm thinking somebody is trying to break into my house at 3 a.m."
Cooper, a single mom, said that once she realized what was happening, "I checked my Ring notification and it said there was a person — or something! — at my front door. I wanted to know what I was dealing with."
So she "opened the live feed in the mobile app to see what was going on," she said.
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Once she did, she said she was "greeted by cows. I was shocked!"
A herd of dairy cows had not only shown up in front of her house, they actually wound up hanging around for a while — and ate bushes, trampled on new plants and, yes, left a few cowpies.
"I'm thinking somebody is trying to break into my house at 3 a.m." said Cooper about the alarm. But seeing the dairy cows outside "was shockingly awesome," she said.
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She had just "moved into the house three weeks before" the incident, she said. "I got the Ring doorbell from my parents for Christmas."
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After she had it installed, "this was the first thing the doorbell caught on camera."
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And "literally, the first thing I see [on the Ring app] is a cow licking my camera," she said about her initial check that night.
The herd of cows "ate my plants," she said. "I'm like, OK, that's what I get for saying ‘I don't like these plants,’" said Cooper, laughing.
One cow was caught trying to eat the Ring doorbell — but "it [the doorbell] held strong throughout the whole ordeal. The cow eventually gave up — and went off to enjoy a plant instead."
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‘Mooove’ over
The dairy cows that showed up in her new housing community were likely from a location about a mile or two away.
"To get to my house," said Cooper, "the cows had to trample through some new houses that are in the process of being built. I am in the most recent [group] of houses completed — and there are a few closer down the street that are unoccupied [and] being built. So these cows had a nice leisurely stroll."
"Literally, the first thing I see [on the Ring app] is a cow licking my camera."
Cooper said the cows ultimately "ended up wandering back home. And I kid you not, one cow mooed — then the other cows mooed."
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She continued, "After that, they started walking back [to the farm] they came from. They destroyed some fresh landscaping and left some lovely things behind. But, you know, I'd like some grass," said Cooper, laughing and taking it all in stride.
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"It was an experience. If you own a house, definitely invest in some type of camera system," she said.
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The fact that the Ring chime and doorbell system "woke me up to alert me of the commotion outside makes me feel safer."
She also said she'll likely "invest in the Ring floodlight" as well. "The cows ended up destroying my side yard, too, and I'm sure the floodlight would have startled them enough to go home."
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Check out how "the cows came home" in Georgia by watching the video at the top of this article, or check it out here.