Moo-ve off my porch! Doorbell camera captures bizarre moment a herd of escaped cows invade woman’s front yard and tuck into her shrubs
- Footage from Ring door camera in Georgia on February 3 shows mooing guests
- Homeowner Alisha said the runaway cows escaped from a dairy farm nearby
- They destroyed her landscaping and munched on her front yard shrubs
- She found incident funny, saying it was the first footage her new camera caught
This is the bizarre moment a herd of escaped cows paid a night-time visit to a city homeowner.
Footage filmed on a doorbell camera shows the mooing visitors strolling down a residential street in Warner Robins, Georgia, at 3am one February morning.
The peaceful street was first taken over by the loudly mooing cows who then gathered at homeowner Alisha’s front door, munching on the shrubs in her yard.
Footage filmed on a Ring doorbell camera in Warner Robins, Georgia, shows the mooing guests at homeowner Alisha’s door on the night of February 3
The peaceful residential street was first taken over by the cows who then gathered at Alisha’s front door, munching on the shrubs in her yard
Alisha told Fox 5: ‘The cows completely destroyed my new landscaping and ate my bushes.
‘There are deep holes from the cows walking in the grass, along with some lovely cow pies, but overall fixable damage.’
She added: ‘There was one cow in particular that I caught on camera trying to eat the Ring Video Doorbell, but it held strong through the whole ordeal.
‘The cow ended up giving up and enjoyed a plant instead.’
Alisha was left amused by the incident and said that she had only been living in the house for three weeks when it happened
The black and white cows had escaped from a dairy farm two miles away.
Alisha was amused by the incident on February 3, telling Newsweek that she had only been living in the house for three weeks when it happened.
She said the Ring doorbell had been a Christmas present and it was hilarious that the first piece of footage it captured was a bunch of rogue cows.
The activity of the runaway cows at the door triggered the alarm rigged up to her phone via the doorbell, waking her up at around 3am.
It remains to be seen how the escapees left the dairy farm but Alisha thinks they reached her street through a nearby building site.
But Alisha was told by the farm the next morning that it was the first time cows had escaped or visited a home in the area.
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