Watch: Fast and Furriest — Women race cows in the Swiss Alps

In Flumserberg, women saddle up on cows for a wild, unpredictable dash through the Alps

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Racers ride their cows during the Cow Race Grand Prix, a two-round race exclusively for female jockeys and the only event of its kind in Switzerland, held in the Alpine resort of Flumserberg.
Racers ride their cows during the Cow Race Grand Prix, a two-round race exclusively for female jockeys and the only event of its kind in Switzerland, held in the Alpine resort of Flumserberg.
AFP

Dubai: — It’s not your usual Alpine race. To the sound of clanging cowbells, thundering hooves, and delighted cheers, nine cows — each ridden by a female jockey — charged across the green slopes of Flumserberg for Switzerland’s annual Cow Grand Prix.

The quirky event, held more than 1,300 metres above sea level near the scenic Walensee lake, is open exclusively to women riders. It began in 2006 as part of Flumserberg’s autumn festivities and now attracts up to 5,000 spectators each year.

The “fast and furriest” contestants compete over two grass laps marked with hay bales, with the winner earning a 40-kilogram bag of feed, a giant Alpine cowbell, and plenty of bragging rights. Riders say it’s far trickier than horse racing — unpredictable, bumpy, and entirely at the mercy of the cows’ moods.

A cow is presented to the public prior to the start of the Cow Race Grand Prix, a two-round race exclusively for female jockeys and the only event of its kind in Switzerland, held in the Alpine resort of Flumserberg.
Lea Werner riding Viola, reacts after winning the Cow Race Grand Prix.

This year’s champion, Viola, stormed ahead in the final stretch to defend her title, with her rider Lea Werner celebrating to the crowd’s applause. Organisers say the event began when local women secretly trained after men dismissed the idea — a decision that’s now the pride of the mountains.

Video and inputs from AFP