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Now, there are several qualities which are essentially characteristic of a disposition
to fatten. There have not, as yet, been any book-rules laid down, as in the case of M. Guénon's indications of
milking-cows; but there are, nevertheless, marks so definite and well understood, that they are comprehended and
acted upon by every grazier, although they are by no means easy to describe. It is by skillful acumen that the
grazier acquires his knowledge, and not by theoretical rules; observation, judgment, and experience, powerful
perceptive faculties, and a keen and minute comparison and discrimination, are essential to his success.
The first indication upon which he relies, is the touch. It is the absolute criterion of
quality, which is supposed to be the keystone of perfection in all animals, whether for the pail or the butcher.
The skin is so intimately connected with the internal organs, in all animals, that it is questionable whether even
our schools of medicine might not make more use of it in a diagnosis of disease. Of physiological tendencies in
cattle, however, it is of the last and most vital importance. It must neither be thick, nor hard, nor adhere firmly
to the muscles. If it is so, the animal is a hard grazer, a difficult and obstinate feeder, no skillful man will
purchase it, such a creature must go to a novice, and even to him at a price so low as to tempt him to become a
purchaser. On the other hand, the skin must not be thin, like paper, nor flaccid, nor loose in the hand, nor
flabby. This is the opposite extreme, and is indicative of delicateness, bad, flabby flesh, and, possibly, of
inaptitude to retain the fat. It must be elastic and velvety, soft and pliable, presenting to the touch a gentle
resistance, but so delicate as to give pleasure to the sensitive hand a skin, in short, which seems at first to
give an indentation from the pressure of the fingers, but which again rises to its place by a gentle
elasticity.
The hair is of nearly as much importance as the skin. A hard skin will have straight and
stiff hair; it will not have a curl, but be thinly and lankly distributed equally over the surface. A proper
grazing animal will have a mossy coat, not absolutely curled, but having a disposition to a graceful curl, a
semifold, which presents a waving inequality; but as different from a close and straightly-laid coat, as it is from
one standing off the animal at right angles, a strong symptom of disease. It will also, in a thriving animal, be
licked here and there with its tongue, a proof that the skin is duly performing its functions.
There must be, also, the full and goggle eye, bright and pressed outward by the fatty bed
below; because, as this is a part where Nature always provides fat, an animal capable of developing it to any
considerable extent, will have its indications here, at least, when it exists in excess.
So much for feeding qualities in the animal, and their conformations indicative of this
kindly disposition. Next come such formations of the animal itself as are favorable to the growth of fat, other
things being equal. There must be size where large weights are expected. Christmas beef, for instance, is expected
to be large as well as fat. The symbol of festivity should be capacious, as well as prime in quality. But it is so
much a matter of choice and circumstance with the grazier, that profit alone will be his guide. The axiom will be,
however, as a general rule, that the better the grazing soil the larger the animal may be; the poorer the soil, the
smaller the animal. Small animals are, unquestionably, much more easily fed, and they are well known by experienced
men to be best adapted to second-rate feeding pastures.
But, beyond this, there must be breadth of carcass. This is indicative of fattening,
perhaps, beyond all other qualifications. If rumps are favorite joints and produce the best price, it is best to
have the animal which will grow the longest, the broadest, and the best rump; the same of crop, and the same of
sirloin; and not only so, but breadth is essential to the consumption of that quantity of food which is necessary
to the development of a large amount of fat in the animal. Thus, a deep, wide chest, favorable for the respiratory
and circulating functions, enables it to consume a large amount of food, to take up the sugary matter, and to
deposit the fatty matter, as then useless for respiration, but afterwards to be prized. A full level crop will be
of the same physiological utility; while a broad and open framework at the hips will afford scope for the action of
the liver and kidneys.
There are other points, also, of much importance; the head must be small and fine; its
special use is indicative of the quick fattening of the animal so constructed, and it is also indicative of the
bones being small and the legs short. For constitutional powers, the beast should have his ribs extended well
towards the thigh-bones or hips, so as to leave as little unprotected space as possible. There must be no angular,
or abrupt points; all must be round, and broad, and parallel. Any depression in the lean animal will give a
deficient deposit of flesh and fat at that point, when sold to the butcher, and thus deteriorate its value; and
hence the animal must be round and full.
But either fancy, or accident, or skill, it is unnecessary to decide which has associated
symmetry with quality and conformation, as a point of great importance in animals calculated for fattening; and
there is no doubt that, to a certain extent, this is so. The beast must be a system of mathematical lines. To the
advocate of symmetry, the setting-on of a tail will be a condemning fault; indeed the ridge of the back, like a
straight line, with the outline of the belly exactly parallel, viewed from the side, and a depth and squareness
when viewed from behind, which remind us of a geometrical cube, rather than a vital economy, may be said to be the
indications of excellence in a fat ox. The points of excellence in such an animal are outlined under the subsequent
head, as developed in the cutting up after slaughter.
Now, these qualities are inherent in some breeds; there may be cases and instances in all
the superior breeds, and in most there may be failures.
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