The cow, which is around four-months-old and appears to be in fine health, was found by vet Malan Hughes at a Gwynedd farm, who said she had never seen an animal quite like it
The intriguing animal was found on a farm in Gwynedd
A cow that has wowed a vet by being born with three eyes is still destined to be eaten.
Malan Hughes came across the unusual calf while testing cattle for TB at a farm in Gwynedd, Wales.
The animal, which is around four-months-old and in fine health, did not seem bothered by the additional eye, the Daily Post reported.
“Vets tend to see all sorts of things – cyclops lambs and animals born with two heads – but I have never seen anything like this before,” Malan said.
“From the outside the extra eye looks fine. It has eyelids and eyelashes, and it is moist too, as if some kind of lubricant is being secreted.
“But it’s impossible to know if anything is going on behind the eye.”

It is unclear if the cow can see through the eye (Image:
Malan Hughes WS)
Likely to be a developmental anomaly, the third eye doesn’t appear to be causing any problems.
Three-eyed calves are vanishingly rare but seven years ago one born in India was worshiped as a god.
Villagers in Tamil Nadu flocked to visit the calf, who was named after Lord Shiva, the Hindu god who is depicted with a third eye and represents wisdom and insight.
The Gwynedd calf – a dairy cross British Blue animal – is unlikely to receive the same kind of attention.
Malan said it should lead an otherwise “normal” life for a beef animal that is ultimately destined for the food chain.
“It does not act any differently from any other calf,” she said.
“As a veterinary practice, we will certainly be treating it with the same care we give every animal.”
Malan, who works for the Milfeddygon Deufor veterinary practice in Y Ffor, is herself a dairy farmer’s daughter who regularly helps out with the family’s cattle at home.
She was not expecting a deluge of interest that followed her unexpected discovery.