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NY dairy farmer's widow wants to keep farm going

Fri Jan 22, 2010 9:41 PM EST
us-news, us, new-york, suicide, cows, dairy
Associated Press
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COPAKE — The widow of a New York dairy farmer who methodically slaughtered 51 cows before taking his own life says she wants to figure out a way to keep the farm going.

Dean Pierson, 59, was found dead Thursday on the floor of his barn in Copake, a rural hamlet 115 miles north of New York City. Nearby, half his herd lay in their milking stalls, also dead of gunshot wounds.

Pierson left no explanation for what he'd done, just a simple note on the barn door warning whoever found it not to come in and to call the police.

But there appeared to be a method to his bloody work. He killed only the cows that required frequent milking, letting 50 others live, including heifers and calves.

Neighbors speculated that he was trying to spare his family the burden of caring for the animals.

He left no suicide note, said his wife, Gwynneth, who was home at the time of the shootings but heard nothing.

"No one knows why for sure," she told the Times Union of Albany, adding that her husband had been "talking a lot to his mom."

Now, she said, "We need to figure out how to keep the farm going ... It wouldn't be right for all that work he put into it to go to nothing."

On Friday, neighboring farmers used a backhoe and bulldozer to bury the animals, pushing them into a deep pit in the Columbia County soil.

Pierson had four children, but he milked the herd alone — once before sunrise and again at night, neighbors said. He kept mostly to himself, rarely visiting with other farmers.

"Dean had no help on the farm and he worked really hard to do it all himself," neighbor Susan Kiernan told the Times Union.

"It's hard to hang in now and a lot of dairy farmers are going out of business," she added. Kiernan's family has operated a dairy farm for three generations.

The gruesome scene in the barn was discovered at about 1 p.m. Thursday by a neighboring farmer

State police Capt. Scott Brown told the Rockford Register-Star that an investigation revealed that the farmer was having "personal issues."

The farm was founded by Pierson's father, a Swedish immigrant. He named the property High Low Farm.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Regions: United States , Albany/Schenectady/Troy
  • Public Discussion (13)
G. H.

Sad! For so many, everything is hard now. Suicides are terribly sad losses. Condolences to his family.

  • 9 votes
Reply#1 - Sat Jan 23, 2010 1:16 AM EST
River-239955

Sad, indeed. Poor cows could have had a better life.

  • 4 votes
#1.1 - Sat Jan 23, 2010 1:21 AM EST
SS-CA

Poor cows could have had a better life.

I'm thinking he did it so they wouldn't possibly die from lack of care (keep in mind I have no idea what his farm was like), or as a protest as alkimija points out (#2)

  • 2 votes
#1.2 - Sat Jan 23, 2010 2:50 AM EST
Reply
alkimija

I'm not surprised. Dairy farming is increasingly impossible to make a profit in, especially for a small farm owner.

I remember there was a story about dairy farmers in Europe protesting the subsidies and trade barriers and agribiz handouts that made their way of live virtually unliveable any longer - and in protest they poured millions of litres of milk onto a field.

The response? They were criticised for not giving their milk away.

Some people can't understand that the milk is the product of their labour. How many of them would give away hundreds of hours of their labour for free?

Poor guy, poor cows, and ultimately, poor us.

  • 11 votes
Reply#2 - Sat Jan 23, 2010 2:04 AM EST
SS-CA

Sad to hear about; agriculture is one of the most confusing sectors of business I've seen (yes, up there with banking), and yet so much is kept under the table: subsidies, barriers, codes, lobbyists, etc. I still have yet to "crack the code" on much of it, seems shady whenever I do though, and sad that so many small businesses have such a hard time.

  • 5 votes
#2.1 - Sat Jan 23, 2010 2:53 AM EST
millerb-1023348

totally agree Alkimija:
We live upstate in dairy land and that cold spell was totally hell on dairy farmers. Also rural areas are in bad shape, people are so urban now, they really don't get how hard farming is and dairy farming is the worst. They get no help and they have to beg to make a dime for all the work. No vacays from milking 2X a day 365 . THIS STORY IS REALLY ONE OF MANY. It is just more dramatic than a hunting "accident" and because it was kind of a family anihilation, where there is love for family AND for the cows he killed that he didn't think could be properly cared for --the have to be milked. And it has been really really cold. Water freezing in barns-they need water, and it is grim in upstate in January.

  • 3 votes
#2.2 - Sat Jan 23, 2010 10:37 PM EST
Reply
Auteur 1536

That's beyond sad.

  • 3 votes
Reply#3 - Sat Jan 23, 2010 6:42 AM EST
Pvt-Public
  • State police would only say that Pierson was having personal issues.

Really? Ya think?

  • 1 vote
Reply#4 - Sat Jan 23, 2010 8:26 AM EST
bitemore

Beyond tragic... worse, there will be no wake-up call to our corrupt so-called "leaders" that will amount to needed changes being made. Our government simply steps over the corpses and plows straight ahead... business as usual, who cares who suffers, who cares who dies, as long as our elected jerks get theirs.

Oh, yeah... and as long as Conan O'Brien can spend $5 million to get a race horse in a mink Snuggie on his show, who cares about people who gave their all and have nothing left...

Phooey!

  • 6 votes
Reply#5 - Sat Jan 23, 2010 8:39 AM EST
Tim Lucas

Conan spent cbs money, not his money. This was a dig to cbs as they have to pay for intellectual property. What does this have to do with the farmer? Why don't you go sit in the corner before you spout off and think about it.

    #5.1 - Sat Jan 23, 2010 1:39 PM EST
    Reply
    caroaber

    The man fires a rifle at least 51 times, and the repeated volleys attracted no notice?

    I pass through Columbia county, NY every month. Sure, it's spread out, but someone had to hear that massacre as it happened. Yet, this was only discovered when a visitor stopped by?? Weird.

    Thank goodness the heifers and calves were spared. (Who knew that the milk-cows were lowest in the pecking order?)

    • 1 vote
    Reply#6 - Sat Jan 23, 2010 11:15 AM EST
    Tim Lucas

    They failed to say monetary issues and instead said personal issues. Farmers are plain read so why can't the story be told truthfully and lay the burden where it belongs? Their are many that has chosen death over failure but just who is actually responsible for it? I am sure it wasn't their choice and farmers are tight with money so the current environment for all is not sunny and bright as so many has checked out. It's a shame people can't do what they love and make a living as these milk cows was all he wanted to do and take care of. He had no way out as homes too are lost and people have no where to go. I can only blame one thing and that answer is obvious.

    • 1 vote
    Reply#7 - Sat Jan 23, 2010 1:19 PM EST
    Pvt-Public

    Tim,

    • They failed to say monetary issues and instead said personal issues.

    You know something we don't? Nothing was said about financial problems.

    • It's a shame people can't do what they love and make a living...

    It sure is. One local farmer said "these are hard times to be a farmer". These are hard times for a lot of folks, true?

    But hey, if you know more about this story than is written please let us know where we can find out too. Bottom line is until something is actually stated from people who actually know him, we don't know what caused his problems. For all we know his wife just left him for a traveling salesman, and his daughter took off with a heroin addict.

    • I can only blame one thing and that answer is obvious.

    Maybe it is obvious to you, but I think there could be other reasons.

    • 1 vote
    #7.1 - Sat Jan 23, 2010 2:06 PM EST
    Reply
    asdfhsadfgDeleted
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