This was an interesting and educational experience for me.
A while back I received a message from @mericanhomestead about an opportunity. The opportunity was to come down to @shalomacres and meet up with @randomstuff and @beatitudes8 to help butcher a cow. This sounded like a great opportunity to not only learn something new, but also to help others and to meet up with some great steemians.
LET THE LEARNING BEGIN
While I will spare you all of the details, I will share a bit about the whole process and day. @Mericanhomestead and @papa-pepper met up the day before, and traveled down to @shalomacres together. We had a wonderful time hanging out with the family of @shalomacres that night, including @randomstuff, and finally wrapped things up around midnight. @Mericanhomestead and I hit the couches, but I stayed up for a while to take care of some "steemit stuff."
We awoke at 6:30 am to get the day started. Our goal was to be done quartering the cow by noon, so we wanted to get and early start. Interestingly enough, it was a bitterly cold day and the power went out soon after we awoke. I was blessed to be able to see the sky lighting up even before the sun rose, and relished the experience.
Soon it was time to call the cows and get things started. Here you can see @mericanhomestead with the rifle that we used. While no one takes pleasure in the killing of animals here, it is a choice that many of us are making. Deciding to raise our own meat often means killing our own animals, and on the homestead, it often comes with the territory. @Shalomacres hasn't even purchased meat from the store in four years now.
The cows came when called, and the one that was selected for the day was separated. In a moment, it was over, and we were ready to start the process. The cow had lead a happy and healthy life, and just had this one bad day. Unlike when people have pet dogs (for example) that become old and full of health issues which eventually lead to the owners putting them to sleep, this cow was taken out in the prime of her life, before she began to suffer the pains of growing old.
With the power still out, we needed a generator to get the garage door open and get the tractor out. Thankfully, we were able to overcome this obstacle. Eventually the power did come back on, but we managed without it when we had to.
Tractors are very handy "tools" to have on the homestead. For this project, it allowed us to move a very heavy animal where we needed it. I learned a lot through the whole process, and we ended our portion of the help in good time. It was great to hang out with some more homesteading steemians too. Besides the practical butchering things that I learned, two other things stuck out, which I'll share below.
A FREEMARTIN
This heifer was about three and a half years old if I remember right. She weighed almost a half ton. Normally, people prefer to eat steers, which are castrated males. If you are keeping a male for breeding, you usually only need one, so "extra" males are frequently castrated and then raised for beef. Young female cows are often raised up to be bred, and since cows believe in polygamy, one bull can breed several cows.
Unfortunately for this female cow, she was a "freemartin" or "martin heifer." I had never even heard of this before, so I'm glad that I learned about it now. This is an infertile heifer, because she was a twin to a bull calf. In the womb, some cellular material from a male twin mixed with hers, and left her unable to conceive. This is not all that rare in cattle, and can even happen with pigs, sheep, and goats.
Since she could not successfully breed and conceive, this became her new purpose on the homestead; a meat cow.
A VIKING FUNERAL
This was another amazing thing I learned. At @shalomacres, the common practice is to burn whatever remaining parts they do not plan on using. After the meat, bones for bone broth, and a variety of parts for dog food have been removed, whatever remains is placed on a large pile of cedar wood. Since the cedar wood burns very hot, it helped completely burn the waste parts.
From what would have been wasted, I took the hide to attempt to tan. It is a lot of work to try to tan a hide this large, so most people don't even try, and I can't blame them. Because it isn't really food, they are often discarded when people butcher cows. I'll see how it goes, and I'll let you know. Additionally, I also cut the tongue out of the head, but that's another story for another day.
The purpose of burning the waste is simple. First off, it cuts down on predators and scavengers in the area. If a carcass was left to decompose, the vultures and coyotes would certainly make their way in. With baby lambs and other animals around the homestead, inviting coyotes to come near is not a good idea. Also, once everything is burned, the wood and bone ash can be used in the gardens and fields as a fertilizer, so nothing is really wasted at all.
A big thanks to @shalomacres for allowing me to join in and come down, and a shout out to @mericanhomestead, @randomstuff, and @beatitudes8 too! Thanks guys! Hopefully I'll see you all again soon.
As always, I'm @papa-pepper and here's the proof:
proof-of-cow
Until next time…
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It is truly amazing to spend your day in nature
And occupy yourself with those simple things
Great feeling .. you should all try it
Awesome @papa-pepper ! One more fun adventure of yours! :)
Thanks for coming down to help. It was a great day.
It was, looking to coming back with the whole tribe sometime!
.....Thank you for the post
I also dont like when some owners putting them pats to sleep or find some other way to go away from them .... I have some aquariums and allay take care to the end of my fishes ..... nothing mather if they are pretty, helthy or not ...
Awesome story👍🏼 How much meat did y’all get from it? And I am looking forward to the tanning of the Hyde upvoted and Resteemed.
The deal was that I would get soup bones for helping. @Shalomacres raised this cow as meat for their family. The tongue and hide was just an added bonus for me.
How much meat 🥩 did they get from it i was just curious?
I don't have an exact amount yet since the majority of it is still in coolers aging. We pulled out 40lbs to make a breakfast sausage (video and recipe to come our shortly) and the cooler are still heavy! I believe it will be close to 300lbs. We keep nothing on the bone which is why the weight is lower than what come from a butcher.
Awesome thank you
Here there is a profesional butcherwith a hoist on the back of a smalish truck. They visit the cow in its own paddock, walk the cow over to the truck. A quick bang, the cow is hoisted, bed and gutted in the paddock, onto a plastic sheet to pick up the remains.
The cow is transported to the butcher shop where it changes into the requested cuts, which are labled and frozen.
A couple of days later they are taken home to fill the freezer for a short time.
By using a pro butcher there is a greater selection of cuts an anjimal will provide
It was best click
How did the meat taste. You didnt mention that
I didn't try any, but we will be making broth from some of the bones. I could let you know once we do that.
Next time you come down with your family we will fix you all some...great post!
Good jop friend.
Upvote and resteem
Great idea to burn the leftovers after getting most of it @papa-pepper ! for the obvious reasons as you said , other prediators stopping by ! We have done the same thing before in regards to other animals and at this time of year there is no Fire Ban on , so its a great excuss to also invite neighbors and friends for a Bon Fire party ! Yippee ! Hope you all / or they got a lot of awesome beef ! Steeming on , thanks for shadring with us !🐄🐮🐄
Looks like you guys are eating Smoked Meat from a previous post !!
Thanks @karenmckersie! Looks like someone will be a 70 soon!
Your welcome ! Well im slowly moving a point each day lol! Im at 69.938 haha ! tomorrow i will be 69.939 ! at this rate It will be min. a month from now !! I have stopped posting in my @momskitchen account putting everything into this one , untill I hit level 70 ! 😀
very interesting post
best wishes to be friends
let's share the same and give
Best wishes to be friends? You commented less than a minute after I posted... did you even read any of it, or just scroll to the bottom?
If I "share the same" that means that I would have to NOT read your post either.... is that the kind of friend you want?
Ita amazing pic .but where this place
@shalomacres.
good work by you god bless you
Thank you sir from r sharing . I've found this post useful to my development in agriculture.
Yeah, if you want meat, kill the animal first. Eating them alive is just cruel...
I know right. It was good to know
Oh my land, "Eating them alive is just cruel..." you are a hoot. :D LOL. :D
More protein @papa-pepper
well planned day. killing animals is what so many don't think about at all. Yet they love eating the meat.
your way of killing animals is also a bit different from how we do it here in Africa where we slaughter with a knife, cutting through the neck. I too will be posting about that.
This is a great way to bring steemians together as well, we are looking forward to promoting steemit here with another beef day. great one papa-pepper
Great content, thanks for sharing!
This is a great adventure. Guess you had alot of fun there
Its interesting to note how the whole process went through from butchering to barbeque to the table meat.
Good post, I like your posts.
follow you and upvote
hope you will also
good post, I like your post ..
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Great day of education so you can be the teacher for your family.
So how many skills did you learn this day?
I think I've learn alot from this educative piece of homestead, you're indeed a good farmer @papa-pepper
I think you a great day @papa-pepper and really enjoyed it well!
It's always interesting to try something new!!
I have a feeling of thank in myself to see such things being shared on the platform . I can see now there are people who care about others . This sould inspire all of us .
Bravo for the good things you have been doing so far and for the ones you are going to do in the future . We support you .
Good content, quite interesting, a good read and beautiful pictures. Thanks.
Help me votes..
https://steemit.com/travel/@asrulwahdi/the-journey-of-seeking-pleasure-in-the-outdoors-b42eb0502bbd
We finished up before noon even with the power outage. Great team work and a job well done.
Looking forward to the next time.
Another awesome day with friends and another learning experience. Many hands also make for light work. A half ton cow would be difficult to handle for one or two people. And you gained another hide to tan. Have you decided what you will do with the hides?
I love that the cows come when called. :D Our girls do the same thing, as long as my husband is the one calling them. They sometimes come for me too, but always for him. :D
That is a great idea about the viking funeral for the waste. We haven't butchered our cattle on our homestead yet, just taken them to a nice butcher about 30-40 minutes away. He does such a wonderful job, but it would be nice if we had the ability to do it here. I'm not sure how much help I'd be in the whole process, but I'd give it the "old college try" as they say. :D
The baby lambs are so cute. I'd want to cuddle them if we had them. :D
Its so great that you all live close enough to help each other out with things like this and its so cool that you all met through steemit. :D
God bless you all. :D Have an awesome day! :D
So wonderful to see others diving into the adventure of learning to use parts that may otherwise be wasted. Tanning hides is a beautiful (and labor intensive art). I teach Brain Tanning up here in Northern Alberta and I have been so impressed with the welcoming and desire for this traditional skill! It is the perfect activity for bringing together a group within the community to learn together. Which ever method you chose, I wish you much success! Thank-you for sharing this community moment with the rest of us!