Wild cows lounge on North Carolina’s Cedar Island in May 2019. On 6 September 2019, Hurricane Dorian blasted the island with Category 1 force winds and rain, creating what locals described as a “mini tsunami”. The low-lying marshlands were soon inundated with an estimated eight feet of water, and the cows were swept out to sea by the storm surge. They got lucky when they washed up at Cape Lookout National Seashore. Photo: Paula O'Malley Photography
Wild cows lounge on North Carolina’s Cedar Island in May 2019. On 6 September 2019, Hurricane Dorian blasted the island with Category 1 force winds and rain, creating what locals described as a “mini tsunami”. The low-lying marshlands were soon inundated with an estimated eight feet of water, and the cows were swept out to sea by the storm surge. They got lucky when they washed up at Cape Lookout National Seashore. Photo: Paula O’Malley Photography

By Antonia Noori Farzan
14 November 2019

(The Washington Post) – The only way to get to Cape Lookout National Seashore, a 56-mile chain of undeveloped barrier islands in North Carolina’s Outer Banks, is by boat. It’s not uncommon for visitors to spot bottlenose dolphins, or even the occasional seal. But last month, park officials stumbled across some unexpected new inhabitants: a trio of bedraggled-looking cows making themselves at home on the sandy shores.

Though only the cows know for sure exactly how they ended up on an island located several miles offshore, B.G. Horvat, the park’s spokesman, has a theory. He told the Charlotte Observer they probably swam at least four miles to get there after Hurricane Dorian crashed into North Carolina’s coast in September, sweeping them out to sea.

“Who knows exactly, but the cows certainly have a gripping story to share,” he said.

Horvat told the paper that the bovine interlopers appear to belong to a herd of feral “sea cows” that previously roamed Cedar Island, a laid-back fishing community connected to the mainland by a causeway. On Sept. 6, Hurricane Dorian blasted the island with Category 1 force winds and rain, creating what locals described as a “mini tsunami.” The low-lying marshlands were soon inundated with an estimated eight feet of water.

Dozens of wild horses drowned. In the immediate aftermath of the storm, Woody Hancock, who manages the herd, told the Carteret County News-Times that he believed many of the community’s beloved wild cattle were dead, too. Roughly 20 cows had freely roamed on private land on the island, and they were all gone.

Nearly a month later, though, park staff spotted a lone cow grazing at Cape Lookout, where the horses’ bodies had been washing up. Two weeks later, they spotted two more.

Horvat and Hancock believe the cows managed to survive by swimming across the raging waters of Core Sound, propelled by the storm surge, the Observer reported. They got lucky when they washed up at Cape Lookout: Pushed any farther out to sea, they would have found themselves adrift in the open ocean, and almost certainly would have drowned amid the heaving swells. [more]

Three cows vanished during Hurricane Dorian. Months later, they’ve been found chilling on an island miles from shore.