![]() ![]() All I remember is thinking the only warm part of my body was my arm. Of course, when I got on with it, it wasn't so bad, and even the cow seemed to quite enjoy it. So on a cold November day with the wind whistling through the cracks in the walls of the wooden barn, in I went. 'A quick up and down the arm with the bar of soap, and in you go.' All we had was a bar of soap, a bucket of warm water, and Jack Watkinson, our veterinary adviser, to show us what to do. The series was set in 1937, when vets didn't have the luxury of modern 1977 rubber gloves, so therefore neither did the actors portraying them. I spent so many days worrying about it, I didn't even give much thought to the cold weather. Now here in black and white: Interior Barn: Tristan is stripped to the waist with his arm up a cow. I tell them that the BBC are not going to pay for a stunt cow that I can put my arm up." Robert Hardy added: "It's enchanting, because once you've got your hand inside you can understand how the interior works."ĭavison first had to perform this examination in the series-one closer "Breath of Life", which was filmed in November 1977. When it came to the oft-joked-about insertion of an arm into a cow's rear end, Davison said: "People think we cheated, or something. ![]() From Wikipedia, a quote from Peter Davison himself… ![]()
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