The Advantages of Raising Beefalo

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PHOTO: ELSIE M. BANKS
Beefalo are hardy, healthy, fertile, easy to manage, and produce good meat.

Three years ago, my husband David and I added the bloodlines of the American bison to our homestead cattle. The result was beefalo. Our relationship with this relatively new breed of livestock–which is 3/8 bison and 5/8 domestic cow–has convinced us that it’s ideally suited to the small family farm. Beefalo are hardy, fertile, and docile, and these bovine-bison hybrids will efficiently convert whatever food is readily available to meat-on-the-hoof.

Weatherproof Cattle

The blizzards of ’76 and ’77–the worst ever recorded in Kentucky –turned out to be an ideal test of our crossbreeds’ ability to withstand severe weather. While farmers all around us lost cattle daily to the cold, our beefalo not only survived but actually thrived! No doubt their “buffalo robes”–thick coats of hair inherited (along with rugged constitutions) from their free-roaming ancestors–helped our cattle weather subzero wind-chill factors.

During the prolonged, extreme cold the beasts fed heavily on hay (homegrown clover, alfalfa, and fescue mixed), but they didn’t eat much expensive grain and their body weights still remained stable. The crossbreeds also drank frigid water from a hole cut in the 18-inch layer of ice on our farm pond, and even that frozen slush produced no ill effects (except on those of us who had to chop through to the water).

Furthermore, when the chilly winds of winter gave way to the sultry days of summer, our beefalo were unaffected by the 80 to 95°F “dog days” temperatures. Like their native American forebears, these hybrid cattle perspire through the skin, and thus maintain a constant body temperature regardless of the weather.

  • Published on May 1, 1979
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