Farming: More than half of children have never seen a cow being milked

57% of urban parents say their child has not seen a cow being milked
Farming: More than half of children have never seen a cow being milked

Abeer Varshikar, Mykyta Bichuk and Nella Boylan Grimes at one of five National Dairy Council School Farm Visits taking place across the country this month. This initiative is part of the wider EU milk Scheme.

More than half (56%) of parents with children under 12 in Ireland say their child has never seen a cow being milked, according to new research commissioned by the National Dairy Council (NDC), highlighting how disconnected many children have become from food production and farming.

Across the country, just 39% of parents with children under 12 say their child has had that experience and 5% didn’t know. 57% of urban parents say their child has not seen a cow being milked, compared with 51% of rural parents. Regional breakdowns show that parents in Munster are the most likely to say their child has seen a cow being milked (44%), compared with 39% in Dublin, 38% in Leinster, and 30% in Connacht/Ulster.

The research indicates a marked trend in a generational gap: 72% of adults say they have seen a cow being milked, but that falls to 66% among 18-34-year-olds and 69% among urban adults, compared with 80% of rural adults.

To address this issue of lack of awareness amongst school children and to reconnect this cohort of our population with farming and food production, the National Dairy Council will organise a series of school farm visits across Ireland this month with 1500 children, 25 schools and five farms due to participate in total. 

This initiative follows a successful pilot programme in 2025, which was undertaken to help bridge this widening knowledge gap. The initiative is part of the wider EU School Milk Scheme, which has operated in Ireland since 1982 and is supported through funding from the EU and the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine.

The school farm visits will connect children with the source of our food through hands-on learning, on working dairy farms with education around animal welfare, grass management, milking, nutrition and food traceability, as well as providing pupils with the opportunity to meet farmers, see first-hand how milk is produced and take part in a five-station learning journey covering areas including nutrition, milk production and life on a working farm. These fully-funded school trips are also intended to showcase the EU School Milk Scheme participants and the benefits of participating in the scheme.

Emma Walls, CEO of the National Dairy Council, said: “For many children, this will be their first real experience of a working farm and their first chance to see where milk comes from, beyond their fridge or the supermarket shelf. Food education is strongest when children can see, ask questions and make the connection for themselves between farming, nutrition and the food they consume every day.” 

Commenting on the research findings, Emma Walls added: “They point to an urban-rural gap which is widening across the generations. At one time, those of us living in towns and cities were just one generation removed from the farm, but that is clearly no longer the case, due to falling numbers of farmers and our changing, multi-cultural population. 

"Our School Farm Visits are intended to help bridge the gap by bringing together food, farming, education, and nutrition in a very practical way. Our dairy farmers are excited to open the farm gates and invite not only their own local community in, but also those further afield in towns and cities. They view it as a great opportunity to connect, and they are proud to showcase the work they are doing to produce top quality dairy in an increasingly sustainable way.” 

The EU School Milk Scheme provides participating schools with a daily supply of milk at discounted rates, together with educational supports that promote the nutritional value of daily dairy consumption. Through this combination of milk provision and learning activities, the scheme is designed to help reconnect children with agriculture and encourage healthy eating habits for life.

The School Milk Scheme is open to primary, secondary and Montessori schools nationwide. Schools interested in learning more or enquiring about joining can visit moocrew.ie/schoolmilk.

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