Mini-Cattle
for Mini-Farms
If you’re a suburban cowboy hankering
to raise a herd and short on ranchland, mini-cattle may be for
you.
New breeds of pint-sized heifers and bulls are making it easier
for small farmers to raise cattle for milk, meat or just fun.
On Bill Bryan’s 20-hectare spread on Maryland’s
Eastern Shore, he has sold seven calves this year.
"We’ve
sold the vast majority of our calves to people who have these
little three-to five-acre farmettes and they’ll fence
in an acre, buy a calf and more or less keep ‘em for
pets," Bryan said.
Two mini-cattle
calves stood nearby, contentedly munching on grass in a small
fenced-in area, skittering away if visitors moved too close.
Bryan
is among a group of pioneering breeders raising miniature
cattle that can be as little as one-third of the size of the
larger breeds.
The reasons
are many, they said. You don’t need 20 hectares to raise
these breeds; two will do. Mini-cattle eat about one-third
as much as a full-sized steer, are less destructive of pasture
land and fencing and are easier to handle.
"I’m
56 years old and you want to know something? I can handle
them better," Bryan said, recounting a struggle the winter
before with a full-size steer who had his horns caught in
a hay rack.
While
each animal may be smaller, more meat can be produced overall
from each hectare, breeders said. And the smaller size of
each animal also has its benefits.
While
some people look to save money by buying an entire cow or
a side of beef, it can be difficult to store the meat from
a 600-kilogram steer, of which about 40 per cent makes it
to the freezer.
Miniature
cattle, which weigh about 270 kilograms, provide enough meat
to last a family of four six months. That’s just about
the freezer shelf life of beef, said Bryan. And the meat tastes
the same, depending on how the cattle has been raised and
fed.
Bryan,
who runs a construction business, said his wife, Donna, does
most of the farm work, spending about two hours a day taking
care of their animals.
"Women
can raise these steers just as well as men can," Bryan
said.
Bryan
said most of his calves will die "of old age" because
buyers are usually looking to breed the smaller cows themselves
or keep them as pets.
Miniature
cattle calves are more expensive than the standard size because
they are still relatively rare. Bryan said he charges $1,600
US for female calves and $1,000 for bulls, compared with $500
to $600 for normal calves. But he expects prices to drop as
the mini varieties become more common.
Richard
Gradwohl, who has developed a number of small breeds at his
Happy Mountain Miniature Cattle Farm in Covington, Wash.,
said six niche markets have developed for the miniature breeds.
Miniature
cattle are primarily sold for use as pets, for small-scale
milk-production, breeding, showing, organic beef production
or for the farm-grown market, which produces cattle on smaller
farms, Gradwohl said. Sixty to 70 per cent are sold as pets,
he estimated.
Full miniature
cattle are defined as those below 107 centimetres at the hip
when fully grown, while mid-size miniatures are up to 122
centimetres, said Gradwohl, who registers 26 miniature breeds.
Another
factor driving the popularity is most people don’t have
enough land for full-sized cattle, which need two hectares
for two cattle, compared with less than one-half a hectare
for a pair of miniature cattle.
"The
years where we had people with three, four, five hundred acres
are gone," Gradwohl said.
"If
you have five acres with miniature cattle the concentration
is about two per acre, so you can raise 10 miniature cattle
on five acres quite well."
Those
10 mini cows will provide about 2,700 kilograms on the hoof,
compared with as much as 1,400 kilograms that could come from
two full-size cattle, Gradwohl said.
"That’s
true because of the feed efficiency of the animals and their
hooves are smaller so they won’t tear up the pasture,"
which helps maintain the grass they feed on, he said.
Cattle
that can be raised easier on grass only is also an increasingly
desirable trait because grass-fed beef is said to contain
higher levels of heart-healthy Omega 3 fatty acids, breeders
said.
However,
finding growers who raise miniature cattle for beef is still
fairly difficult because of the rarity of the breeds and the
fact most are raised as pets.
In Felton,
Del., Charles Warren has a half-dozen Zebus - miniature humpbacked
Brahmans - which he said are the only true miniatures because
they are naturally small and have not been bred down to their
size.
Warren,
who works for Kraft Foods in Dover, Del., keeps the five cows
and one bull as a hobby, along with a variety of other small
animals on his 10-hectare property.
"They’re
like a pet more than anything. I like them because they’re
neat-looking, they’re oddities," Warren said.
Warren
said he hasn’t eaten any or sold any for slaughter,
with most going to breeders and some to a rodeo outfit.
"My
wife won’t eat anything we grow on the farm. She says
if it doesn’t come on a Styrofoam tray we don’t
eat it."
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