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AFP
AFP
Lifestyle
Kenzo TRIBOUILLARD

Aston, the bull who thinks he's a horse

Sabine Rouas and her bull Aston still cause a stir when they go out for a ride in their northern French village. ©AFP

Viéville-sous-les-Côtes (France) (AFP) - At the foot of the vineyards outside a sleepy village in northern France, Sabine Rouas and her steed Aston, a 1.4-tonne (3,000-pound) bull, make stately progress.

A van pulls to a halt and the bemused driver takes out his phone to record the scene.

Aston's outings often trigger the same reaction, and give Sabine a chuckle.

"Honestly, I didn't invent this," she says."Look around the world, people ride all sorts of animals -- ostriches, camels, elephants."

Aston is a local celebrity in the Meuse region, and now around the world, on the web.

Sabine's husband Yannick Kirschhoffer is the bull's social media manager, and Aston has 62,000 TikTok fans, 90,000 YouTube subscriptions and almost as many followers on Facebook.

Dramatic decision

Today the scene is cheerful, but the story begins in Sabine's grief for her dead racehorse.

"Every rider has a particular relationship in their life with a horse.When he died, I didn't want to hear about horses any more," she tells AFP.

At that time in her life, Sabine -- a sales manager -- was living over the border in Luxembourg in a house by a cattle farm.

As time passed she watched the daily life of the cows and one day she decided to ask the farmer if she could meet them, to restore her bond with larger animals.

"I still had a problem with horses, but I missed being in contact with them.So I headed down to the farm and spotted a cow that seemed more alert than the others," she said.

"I started to brush her.I could tell she was intelligent.She learned to raise her hoof to me, to say hello, to respond to her name," she said.

Sabine was delighted with her new friend but, when the cow had a calf, she took a dramatic decision, and bought them both -- despite not having a farm of her own to keep them on.

"For me it was hellish," she says.

"They said I was completely mad and it's true I didn't know anything about how to go about things."

Bovine hurdler

But Sabine knew how to train cats and, believing in the bond between humans and animals, set about training the calf, Aston, to live alongside her.

It wasn't easy.She fell from the young bullock at least 38 times in three months, but nine years later Aston is a show pony: vaulting small hurdles, galloping, prancing sideways.

Today, the team lives in France and Aston has been learning lessons from his neighbours.

"Watching me ride horses, Aston wanted to do the same thing," Sabine gushes."By watching them, he learned a lot, so we played on his talent for mimicry." 

"When people see that, they tell me that Aston thinks he's a horse, and it's true that he loves to copy them.But I can't make him do anything he doesn't want to do."

He's bull-headed, in other words.

"He weighs 1.4 tonnes and he has his own personality.If he jumps over obstacles, it's because he enjoys it."

And if he does enjoy online stardom, he's also spreading the joy.Aston is now much in demand to perform at equestrian events and has appeared in movies while developing an online brand.

"Now people contact me to ask how to ride their bulls.I give advice," says Sabine. 

"I can't quite believe it, he's famous all the way to Japan."

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