Biology:Gloucester cattle
Gloucester cattle are a breed of dairy and beef cattle originating from Gloucestershire and surrounding areas in the West Country of England .
Description
They are large cattle, coloured a rich dark brown in the cows, calves and steers, and almost black in the bulls. They have a white belly and a white finching stripe along the spine and continuing over the tail, and they normally have well-developed white horns with black tips.
History
Cattle of similar type were numerous in the Cotswold Hills and the Severn Valley of England as early as the 13th century. They were valued for their milk (used for Gloucester cheeses), for providing strong and docile draught oxen and finally for their beef.
By 1972 only one significant herd remained and the breed was in danger of dying out. The Gloucester Cattle Society was revived in 1973 and the breed has moved from near extinction to being rated by the Rare Breeds Survival Trust as being "At Risk", as there are still fewer than 750 registered breeding females.[1] In 2021, the RBST said herd numbers had further halved between 2006 and 2020 due to fewer farmers breeding them, with only 26 herds as of April 2021.[2]
The milk of Gloucesters is well-suited to cheese-making, being high in protein and with high butterfat, in particularly small globules. Single Gloucester and Stinking Bishop cheeses are made exclusively from Gloucester cattle milk. Double Gloucester cheese may now be made from the milk of any cattle, although it was traditionally made from that of Gloucesters.
Glamorgan cattle, from the adjacent parts of Wales, are another rare breed of similar type with similar colouration.
References
- ↑ Rare Breeds Survival Trust watch list accessed 21 May 2008
- ↑ "Gloucester cattle breed at increased risk of extinction" (in en-GB). BBC News. 2021-04-11. https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-gloucestershire-56673931.
External links