'Tinder for cows' matches livestock in
the mood for love
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[February 14, 2019]
By Matthew Stock
PETERSFIELD, England (Reuters) - A
Tinder-inspired app is helping farmers match up potential partners for
their cattle.
Called "Tudder" - a mix of dating app Tinder and udder - it lets farmers
swipe right on cattle they like the look of.
They are then directed to a page on the SellMyLivestock website where
they can browse more pictures and data about the animals before deciding
whether to buy.
Valuable information is available on matters like milk yield and protein
content, or calving potential, explained Doug Bairner, CEO of Hectare
Agritech which runs SellMyLivestock (SML) and Graindex, a UK-based
online agritech trading platform.
"Matching livestock online is even easier than it is to match humans
because there's a huge amount of data that sits behind these wonderful
animals that predicts what their offspring will be," he said.
Launching just in time for Valentine's Day, the makers believer Tudder
is the first ever matchmaking app for livestock.
As with the human equivalent, farmers use smartphones to first choose
whether they are looking for a male or female, swiping through photos -
right for yes and left for no - until they find a match.
Putting data at their fingertips connects farmers from all over the
country, making trading easier.
Cattle farmer and Tudder user James Bridger said it eases transport
stress for animals and may rival traditional markets.
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A Tinder-inspired app called Tudder, which helps farmers match up
potential partners for their cattle, is demonstrated at a farm in
Hampshire, Britain February 12, 2019. Picture taken February 12,
2019. REUTERS/Matthew Stock
"You've got all this data of its background and everything which if
you're at a market you might not have had the time to go through for
every single random animal," he told Reuters in the southern English
county of Hampshire.
"There's nothing better than seeing an animal in its home, its
natural habitat, rather than putting it on a lorry ... if someone
rings up and wants to come and have a look, or even getting it from
the picture, it's ideal really from that respect, and they're
happier for it."
SellMyLivestock has listed over £50 million ($64 million) of
livestock, feed and bedding to sell in the last year, dispelling
notions that farmers are stuck in the past, Bairner said.
"Despite the rest of the world's view of farming, it's actually very
technologically driven," he said, citing precision spraying,
automated dairy units and genetic science.
(Reporting by Matthew Stock; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)
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