English edit

Etymology edit

cow +‎ keeper

Noun edit

cowkeeper (plural cowkeepers)

  1. (especially Mauritius) A smallholder who keeps one or several milk cows to fulfil household needs and make some sales but is not a dairyer in the sense of running a herd of dozens or hundreds.
    Hypernym: smallholder
    Coordinate terms: cow cocky, dairy farmer
    • 1982, Booker Agriculture International Limited, Mauritius Sugarcane By-products Study: Main Report[1], United Nations Industrial Development Organization, page 17:
      Utilisation of sugarcane tops / Although some cane tops have always been used as a roughage feed, particularly in the past by smallholder cowkeepers, they are probably the most underutilised of all sugarcane by-products. Options for the use of cane tops are feeding as fresh material; ensiling fresh and/or wilted material for future feed use; and leaving in the field to dry followed by baling.
    • 2003, Geerjanand Saraye, Rafik Fakim, “Impact of the Milk Productivity Bonus Scheme (1993-1998) on Calving Interval”, in Agricultural Research and Extension Unit reports[2], Réduit, Mauritius: Food and Agricultural Research Council, retrieved 2023-12-23, page 1:
      During the last decade, the Ministry of Agriculture introduced a series of incentives in order to increase milk production at the smallholder level. One of these incentives was the Milk Productivity Bonus Scheme that was introduced in 1993. It had the twin objectives of encouraging dairy smallholders commonly known as cowkeepers to decrease calving interval and increase milk production on their farm.
  2. (archaic) A cowherd; a cowman; a dairyer.