Today, they were peacefully grazing on a lush top paddock on Millton's farm overlooking the Pacific Ocean where the seabed jumped 2m in the vicious shaking.
The cows have come to mean a lot for Millton.
They've even sparked a best-selling book, borne out of a poem penned by Millton's wife Jane at 4am the day after the quake, Moo and Moo and the Little Calf Too.
"These are our friends - the guts of our farm really," he said.
"People always want to know about the cows and whether they were ever saved. It's always about the cows, not the people or the earthquake itself. But it's a positive story.
"And in a place where there is so much uncertainty, that's not a bad thing."
The Millton farm by the Clarence River remains cut off by road from Kaikoura as major works on State Highway 1 continues.
The Herald was flown from Kaikoura to nearby Parikawa airstrip by Air Kaikoura which has made that journey a staggering 2000 times in the last 12 months.
Locals, businesspeople and tourists use the service up to 15 times a day.