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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Ellie Forbes & Gabriel McKay & Jon Brady

Highland cow born in Italy welcomed to world with Scottish-themed birthday party

A Highland cow born in Italy has been celebrated with a Scottish birthday party - including a bagpiper and whisky tiramisu.

Highland cow Gino was born on November 28 at a community garden in the city of Turin, the home of Juventus football club and car company Fiat. Staff at Orti Generali celebrated the birth of the coo with a Scottish themed party - with staff dressed up in kilts serving Highland cow cakes, and locals staging Highland dancing with a bagpiper.

Orti Generali bought two Highland cows in September, Tina and Baboo, with Gino born just weeks later - and the trio now graze at the garden which was once wasteland. The business took over the abandoned land, which was strewn with litter and debris, and transformed it into a citizen-led garden project made up of 160 vegetable gardens.

It is cultivated by the local community, with a kiosk selling vegetarian and vegan products grown on the land, and a farm. Highland cows are well-adapted to cold and foggy winters, and their ability to graze on grass and weeds helps keep the small park in order.

Stefano Olivari, founder of Orti Generali, said: "They become a public resource. The grazing animals carry out by themselves and by their nature what would be an expensive public service."

Gino has proven a big hit with locals (SWNS)

Gino was named following a public vote. People were asked to choose between Gino, in honour of Turin-born First World War hero Gino Lisa, Scottino to evoke Scotland or William after William Wallace.

He was officially named at the party on Thursday, which was dubbed 'a Scottish Welcome'. A bagpiper to welcome the guests followed by a Caledonian-themed lunch with 'Scottish style' potatoes and beer.

The party wrapped up with traditional Highland dancing thanks to local group Clivis Torino, which has been operating in Turin for the past 30 years.

Francesco Tresso, green spaces councillor the city of Turin, said: "Things like Orti Generali represent for the city an example of virtuous planning, which permit us to maintain and explore new forms of urban agriculture in a renewed vision of the city fabric in context of the fact that by 2050, cities will house 70 per cent of the world's population.

"Forms of eco-pasture are already present in other green areas of the city and the birth of the new calf is a great sign that we can consolidate this direction."

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