Firefighters Rush to Help Cows in Distress on Hot California Road

Kimberly JohnsonJuly 24, 2025

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Photo: Andrew Skowron / We Animals
When a transport truck broke down on a scorching day in El Dorado Hills, California, dozens of cows were left trapped inside, stuck in a metal trailer with no shade and no escape from the brutal 100-degree heat. Luckily, help arrived.

Firefighters from the El Dorado Hills Fire Department rushed to the scene and did something unexpected and deeply moving. They grabbed their hoses and began spraying water directly onto the cows to help cool them down.

Although the cows were raised for meat or dairy and likely en route to the slaughterhouse, in that moment, they weren’t seen as property or “inventory.” They were recognized for what they are: living, feeling beings who can suffer and who deserve compassion.

A Glimpse into a Hidden Industry

Transporting animals in high temperatures is not unusual. The meat industry routinely subjects animals to long, grueling journeys in all kinds of extreme weather, with minimal legal protections for the animals.

Many people don’t realize that in the United States, farmed animals are often transported for hours, or even days, without temperature control, food, water, or rest. In extreme heat, animals frequently collapse or die from heat stress. And in cold weather, they can freeze to death. Conditions are so abysmal that, according to an analysis, over 20 million animals die each year on their journeys to slaughter.

These suffering animals are mostly hidden from view. But every so often, like on that California road, the truth breaks through.

They Just Wanted to Feel Relief

The firefighters’ response struck a chord because it reflects something so simple: When we see someone suffering, we want to help. Unfortunately, when it comes to farmed animals, most people have been conditioned to ignore our natural instincts to be compassionate. If more people saw cows and other farmed animals the way these first responders did—in need of help and worthy of kindness—imagine how different the world could be.

What You Can Do

The best way to help animals like the cows in this story is to leave them off your plate. Choosing plant-based foods is a powerful way to take a stand against cruelty and support a more compassionate food system. You can also urge your Congress members to support the Industrial Agriculture Accountability Act, groundbreaking legislation that addresses some of the cruelest practices in the meat industry, including transport.

Take action for animals in transport now!

Because all animals deserve more than just a moment of mercy on a hot roadside. They deserve lives of safety and peace.

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Illinois stops gray fox hunting season indefinitely

by: Christopher Boyll

Posted: Jul 31, 2025 / 03:17 PM EDT

Updated: Jul 31, 2025 / 03:17 PM EDT

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SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (WTWO/WAWV)— The hunting and trapping season for gray fox is being closed effective immediately.

This is due to surveys and preliminary results of current research, all indicating a substantial decline in the distribution and abundance of the species over the last decade. Though Illinois isn’t known for harvesting a large number of grey foxes, the closure of the season hopes to put less pressure on the animal. The Illinois Department of Natural Resources said it plans to continue annual surveys and evaluate the population in the state.Two men charged for illegal deer hunting in Vigo County

On June 30, the governor of Illinois passed a law that changed the language of the Illinois Wildlife Code, allowing DNR to open the hunting season by administrative rule. The bill was a DNR initiative with backing from conservation groups and legislators, and they were able to file for the closing of the season on July 9.

Most research shows that the decline in the population is most likely due to diseases such as canine distemper and competition from other canids like coyotes. Though hunters don’t seem to be the major cause, most hunting groups are in support of letting the species grow.

Florida man sets traps for feral cats, tells deputies he ‘kills the ****** things’: WCSO

by: Sierra Rains

Posted: Jul 30, 2025 / 10:15 PM EDT

Updated: Jul 31, 2025 / 07:14 AM EDT

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DEFUNIAK SPRINGS, Fla. (WFLA) — A DeFuniak Springs man was arrested this week after deputies said they learned he had been setting traps for feral cats and then, on at least one occasion, killing them.

Deputies began an investigation on Tuesday, July 29, after a neighbor living on West Violent Lane reported smelling a foul odor coming from a trash can, the Walton County Sheriff’s Office said.Barking, screaming Marine shoots at apartment managers, Hillsborough sheriff says

The caller also reported seeing “numerous” cat traps in the area, according to authorities.

The trash can had been placed by the road early that morning. Deputies looked inside and said they found a dead cat inside of a bag. Investigators said the cat was covered in blood and appeared to have a large, swollen contusion on the side of its head.

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Deputies noticed two armed and baited animal traps near the property’s fence line as they were looking around the area, according to the sheriff’s office.

A gate was blocking off the entrance to the home, but deputies said they were able to contact the man living there, Richard Steven Taylor, 64, over the phone.

When asked about the traps, deputies said Taylor argued he had done nothing wrong and told them he was allowed to set them out since “the cats are pests.”

He told deputies he had been putting out traps for the last 10 years to catch feral cats and said he “kills the ****** things when [he] catches them,” according to the sheriff’s office.

Deputies said Taylor became “increasingly agitated” while talking to them. They eventually asked him to come out and speak with them in person. He did so, wearing only his underwear, according to authorities.

Several minutes passed as Taylor “berated deputies using profanity, calling them names, and making threats,” the sheriff’s office said.

Deputies informed Taylor they were placing him under arrest, but said he refused to exit his fence several times. Authorities said he gave into their commands after they allowed him to put more clothes on.

Taylor was charged with aggravated animal cruelty causing death, threatening a first responder with physical harm, and obstruction without violence. He was booked into the Walton County Jail and was later released on a $21,000 bond.