In Indonesia, in the Padang region, an open landfill borders the forest. The terrain is steep, with ridges and canyons, making it a pasture for hundreds of cows. In the dance of excavators and trucks unloading goods onto the slope of the garbage mountain, a group of people navigate through the chaos, searching for something to eat grass. This nightmare like decoration, in which cows live, mate, play, sleep, and die, has become a shocking spectacle. Lidia Afrilia and David Darmadi's choice to unify time, place, and action - spending a day in a herd of cows on plastic and waste pastures - condenses the absurd and terrifying reality of our world, observed with unusual positivity and clarity. Between realistic tragedies, horror fables, and nihilistic comedies, this dairy diary is unforgettable.