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Pint-sized cattle are a Cuban revolution
The Scotsman ^ | 14 Sep 2004 | ANDREA RODRIGUEZ

Posted on 10/28/2004 3:13:00 PM PDT by sociotard

RAUL Hernandez, a Cuban rancher, claims to have bred a family pet that pays its way - a mini-cow about the size of an Alsatian dog.

Although the same basic shape as any of the world’s famous breeds of cattle, such as Holstein or Aberdeen-Angus, those bred by Mr Hernandez are less than half the size.

Standing about 23 inches (58 centimetres) to 28 inches (71 centimetres) tall, the mini-cows can be kept in a small area, graze simple grasses and weeds, and are, Mr Hernandez says, "a perfect source of milk for Cuban families".

"They are patio cows - easy to work with," the 74-year-old says, smiling. "They give less meat, but they can deliver four or five litres (about a gallon) of top-quality milk to a family every day."

After retiring from a state ranch where he worked for more than 30 years, Mr Hernandez decided he wanted to remain busy and useful. He acquired the Santa Isabel Farm in the tobacco-growing region of western Pinar del Rio province, about 125 miles west of Havana.

Amid the rolling hills surrounded by towering palm trees, Mr Hernandez worked with local agricultural labourers to plant food crops. Then he decided to try breeding miniature cows.

By his own account, there was nothing notably scientific about his attempts. He simply began with a tiny bull, which neighbours had ridiculed because of its size, and mated it with the smallest cows he could find.

With a speed which cattle-breeding specialists and geneticists around the world might envy, he claims that, five years on, he has reached his objective - a herd of cows that reach no higher than his waist.

He says his success has ranchers throughout the area pursuing breeding experiments to come up with their own tiny cows, while he is training local teenagers to help care for the little animals.

"Now the neighbours are excited by the idea," he said.

Dr Tim Roughsedge, an animal breeding research scientist with the Scottish Agricultural College, was not quite so impressed.

"It is possible to carry out extreme selection breeding programmes, with dogs the best-known example," he said. "From one ancestor, we have breeds that range from the tiny Chihuahua to the Irish wolfhound and most points in between, almost all produced by extreme interventionist methods.

"So, it is possible that Mr Hernandez has produced a breed of cattle barely the size of large dogs. Whether they would make useful family pets is another matter."

For at least the past 30 years, mainstream cattle breeders around the world, whether based on farms or in research stations, have worked at increasing the size of cattle breeds and the amount of meat and milk they produce.

A Holstein milk cow, which can produce about ten gallons of milk a day, will be at least twice as tall as a Hernandez cow. A beef cow, such as an Aberdeen-Angus, will be nearly twice as tall and up to four times as heavy.

But there are naturally small breeds, such as the Dexter, which stands about a metre (39 inches) high at the shoulder, and the native Shetland cow, which can survive on the poorest grazing.

These breeds, especially the Dexter, have been used by novelty breeders, mainly in the United States. One such operation is Pillard’s miniature cattle ranch in Iowa, which is trying to breed cattle less than 36 inches tall weighing less than 500lb. It seems that Mr Hernandez is ahead of the game.


TOPICS: Cuba; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: castro; cattle; cows; cuba; dwarf; fidel; milk; miniature; rancher
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To: Balding_Eagle
Originally posted by Balding_Eagle
I'm not sure, but I do know that you need to milk them the same time every day, otherwise the milk production suffers.
Fortunately, it's only in leap years that that you have to do that 366 days a year. Other years you can get by with 365 days a year getting up at 5 AM, so you can be in the barn and started by 6 AM, And of course you have to be there again at 6 PM every afternoon.
Again, if you do decide to do this, it's only 7 days a week, not the 8 days a week the Beatles sang about! It will only SEEM like 8 days a week,

Ha! An excellent point, and well put.

41 posted on 10/28/2004 4:29:03 PM PDT by sociotard (I am the one true Sociotard)
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To: sociotard

Man, I wanna live where you are. Gallon of milk is $3.99 here at grocery here.

Costco has them for $2.05, but it's across town and only a monthly trip kind of thing.


42 posted on 10/28/2004 4:35:25 PM PDT by Rebelbase (Kerry hunting is like Bush going to a gay disco just to prove he's not homophobic (thanks QLA))
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To: sociotard
Yeah, our food is cheaper than it ever has been in the history of this world. That's thanks to the American farmer.

I used to be one, and produced 250,000 market hogs in the years I farmed. That's over 17,000 tons of pork meat.

I know a little about having to be at work 7 days a week 365 a year. Christmas, new Years etc, were shorter 4 hour days, with rotating schedules. It's a grinding schedule.

43 posted on 10/28/2004 4:37:23 PM PDT by Balding_Eagle (Liberalism has metastasized into a dangerous neurosis which threatens the nation's security)
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To: JerseyHighlander
That being said, the Cubans should be driving a newer sub-compact American or Asian car to their local supermarket which should have refrigeration, 24 hour electricity, and a food selection at least equal to that available in the Dominican Republic. Instead they breed cattle. This is what America's deep green anti-civilization environazis want here in the USA.

Why is that desire a liberal one only? There is nothing wrong with having your own goat or mini-cow, if you can swing it with the zoning.

Perhaps some of us *like* truly fresh milk, butter, and cheese, aren't fond of driving everywhere, and don't want a "new car" to drive around in. Perhaps some children would actually do better to be raised with the responsibility of taking care of the animal and helping prepare the food it produces, rather than being chauffered everywhere in that new car.

Seems to me trying to retain some of the good things of the past is a *conservative* value.

44 posted on 10/28/2004 4:39:57 PM PDT by valkyrieanne (card-carrying South Park Republican)
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To: sociotard

First Castro brags about what good whores they have, and now this. The good news and breakthroughs for progress never stop on that blessed isle.


45 posted on 10/28/2004 4:40:23 PM PDT by dagnabbit (Prevent the next 9-11. Stop Islamic immigration and deport Muslim aliens.)
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To: sociotard
"Poop machines people keep in the house."

No. These are lawnmowers. I thought sheep were lawnmowers while in Spain. But you can put a chain on these and let them go for it! The chain is so they don't sit in the middle of the street.

46 posted on 10/28/2004 4:45:52 PM PDT by BobS
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To: Mark in the Old South

"You sir are obviously not a fan of gardening."

I love gardening. I like cattle, too. I go out my back door and see plenty of them. I also smell them and see them dump several pounds of poop each day. A calf (fair comparison to a micro-cow) puts out maybe thirty pounds of poop per day as cows are vegetarian and must eat a lot as compared to a dog which eats small amounts of protein-rich foods. Cows poop lots more than dogs. Just the way it is.

I don't see how this would be practical in Havana.


47 posted on 10/28/2004 4:51:21 PM PDT by PeterFinn ("Tolerance" means WE have to tolerate THEM, they can hate us all they want.)
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To: valkyrieanne

Dwarf cows are not a part of the history of farming. There's absolutely nothing wrong with raising children on a farm, but part of that traditional American ethic was teaching kids that farming, and the responsibility that goes with it, served a valuable purpose. These cows don't.


48 posted on 10/28/2004 5:10:37 PM PDT by Mr. Lucky
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To: sociotard

I know that. I was talking about the amount of money a person has to earn (before taxes) in order to buy $2.50 worth of milk with after tax dollars.


49 posted on 10/28/2004 6:14:02 PM PDT by elli1
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To: Mr. Lucky

Excuse me for raining on your idyllic memories of childhood, but I live on a farm and own cows.

Assuming a 305 day lactation cycle, an average American Holstein milk cow will produce over 21,000lbs of milk per year, or almost ten times the milk the Cuban government claims for one of these little critters, plus the bull calves can be fed out for beef production.

Except as a pet, or curiosity in the vein of the Vietnamese pot-belly pig, (or as a propaganda story foisted on a naive and willing media) This animal would serve no economic purpose in a free 21st century society.

And it may well be that by the end of the 21st century, dairy cows will serve no economic purpose in free society, either and those dumbass Cubans will only have advanced to getting their milk from the dairy farm factory.

In my family's situation, we weren't interested in having 21,000# of milk a year. At the time, Holsteins produced around 2 gal. of milk per day (far less than they produce today)--which was more than we needed, so we had a Guernsey cow which produced less milk but had a higher butterfat content. Which brings up another point--look at the dramatic increases in milk production per cow over the past 40 years. The Cuban guy has produced a small cow that gives about as much milk that a much larger cow, the Guernsey, produced 40 years ago...and he has bred that cow into being in about 5 years, according to the article. Given the track record of the American dairy industry, what kind of yields could one expect of the mini-cow after 40 years of selective breeding for milk production? Perhaps a two-fold increase in an animal half the size requiring less space/ smaller barns/ less capital investment? So, to pronounce the eeconomic viability of the mini-cow to the 21st century DOA is a bit premature, IMO.

And, sure enough, Holstein bull calves can be castrated and fed out for ''meat'' production, but I don't care how you paint a Holstein, it isn't a ''beef'' cow. I'll have my ribeye cut from another cow...which, BTW, is why we bred our Guernsey with an Angus bull and prayed like hell that the calf would be a bull calf--something I don't think many dairy farmers do.

50 posted on 10/28/2004 7:01:07 PM PDT by elli1
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To: Graybeard58

Yup, and you were eating real butter when about everyone else you knew was eating (yuck) oleomargarine. :-)


51 posted on 10/28/2004 7:14:20 PM PDT by elli1
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