Meet Goliath, the Adorable Baby Cow That Thinks He's a DognMeet Goliath, the Adorable Baby Cow That Thinks He's a DognMeet Goliath, the Ador...
Meet Goliath, the Adorable Baby Cow That Thinks He's a DognMeet Goliath, the Adorable Baby Cow That Thinks He's a DognMeet Goliath, the Adorable Baby Cow That Thinks He's a DognnMeet Goliath. He's an adorable baby cow who's convinced he's a dog.nnGoliath, who's actually a small calf, was rescued nearly two months ago from a dairy farm that was planning on slaughtering him, according to Shaylee Hubbs, a high school senior who lives with her family on a ranch in Danville, California.nnThough Goliath was "so weak and so small that he couldn't stand and you could pick him up very easily" when the family first got him, they've now nursed him into a healthy 8-week-old calf, Hubbs told ABC News today.nnThe only thing is that he doesn't think he's a cow at all.nn"I'm pretty sure he thinks he's a dog," said Hubbs, 17. "He was raised with our three dogs, and he's around them every day. They chase and play together, he watches how they eat their dog food and drink water from their bowls and copies them and he even lays in their dog beds. He even loves scratches on his neck around his ear."nnMost recently, Goliath learned how to get into the house and sit on the couch, thanks to Hubbs' sneaky 2-year-old Great Dane named Leonidas.nn"He's best friends with Leo, and so he used to watch Leo push down the door handle and come and sit on the couch," Hubbs said. "And of course, he now knows how to come in, too. He just pushes down on the knob with his head and lets himself in and onto our couch."nnA photo of Goliath on the family couch posted to Hubbs' Twitter has been retweeted over 32,000 times and liked over 54,000 times as of Thursday afternoon.nnGoliath and Leo are "best friends," according to Hubbs, who added that Leo "took to mothering the little cow" when he was first brought in.nn"He would lick the little cow on the face and try to nudge him to stand up," she said. "He would lay down with the sick, little cow for hours just to keep him company." Less