Breeding the Perfect Bull
A Texas cattleman used genetic science to breed his masterpiece – a near-perfect Red Angus bull. Then nature took its course
- By Jeanne Marie Laskas
- Photographs by Karen Kasmauski
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 8)
April marks the earliest days in a commercial cow’s life, and arguably the happiest. The calves at the R. A. Brown Ranch, just 6 to 8 weeks old, have been tagged and vaccinated, and now wander freely, chewing the wild grasses of Texas. The sunrise is so red it fills the sky with stripes of fire and turns the cowboy hats pink. Jeff Bezner, a 29-year-old cowboy with prematurely salt-and-pepper hair, glasses and an air of sparkling innocence, has the back of this cattle drive, while two other cowboys take the flanks. They keep the cattle in a clump, pushing them from pasture to paddock. Herding cows is not difficult, especially Red Angus, famously gentle and polite. (For a good time, try wrestling up some Brahmans.) The cows thunder obediently through the buffalo grass as the cowboys’ horses amble and the men occasionally wave their arms, letting out a “Wheeet, wheeeet,” or “Get on now, gals!”
“I never said nothing about love,” Jeff says to his team, referring to the love he has, in fact, been talking about all morning. (Jeff wants a wife.) A cowboy on a cattle drive has time to ponder such matters.
“You’ve known her for a whole six days!” one shoots back.
“Eight,” Jeff says, slapping his chaps. “I’m telling you, she’s awesome.” He whistles through his teeth. The cattle move as one, a rumbling blanket of rolling amber, humming their lazy cow songs: aaaroooom, aaaroooom, aaaroooom.
Beef, even now, is still personal, is cultural, is cowboys.
It isn’t like pork or poultry. Commercial pigs and chickens live their whole lives in industrial-size barns. Beef, in its beginning stages, will never be produced that way because a simple fact remains: all cows eat grass. You need land to grow calves. Lots and lots of land. That land is divided among many owners. Beef production is unlike any other agricultural industry in that it has remained utterly dependent on the family farm or the extended-family farm, manned by the same people who sing in the church choirs and run the school boards and football leagues that knit the fabric of small towns like Throckmorton. Beef production is the largest single segment of American agriculture, a $76 billion industry, and yet more than 97 percent of U.S. cattle ranches are family-owned and -operated.
The average American eats 62 pounds of beef a year, or almost three ounces a day, and shows no sign of slowing down; as a group, Americans regularly consume more than 27 billion pounds a year. This is, in part, a function of food science and the seed-stock providers: beef keeps getting tastier.
Beef is simultaneously low and high tech. Past necessarily coexisting with future. Because of the cowboys and because of the human desire for better meat.
To create the finest steaks, there really is nothing as important as a fabulous cow. Except, of course, an amazing bull.
On the day he found Revelation crippled in the east holding pasture, Donnell stood there feeling sick. Gut-sick, like a man watching his house burn down. In the silver liquid-nitrogen tank up in the ranch’s artificial insemination center, he had only about 100 “straws,” or doses, of Revelation’s semen—hardly a gold mine.
He took his cellphone off his belt clip and called his wife, Kelli, back at headquarters.
“Oh, Donnell,” Kelli said, desolated. She told Betsy, Donnell’s sister, who works in the office, too, and soon word passed around the family.
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Comments (32)
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I think I forgot to include my name and email when I submitted my comment earlier today. Sorry!
Posted by Ann Bell on January 22,2013 | 12:27 PM
"...a $76 billion industry, and yet more than 97 percent of U.S. cattle ranches are family-owned and operated." This wording is a bit misleading. It does not say that 97% of this $76 billion industry is comprised of family-owned ranches. What it actually says is that 97% of the total number of all ranches in teh industry are family-owned. Two very different statistics and and not so unexpected if you think about it. The family-owned ranch is a much smaller operation than a corporate owned one, hence it would not be unexpected that they would be far more numerous. All I'm saying is that you must look at statistics carefully and that they are often not as meaningful as they may appear. I did enjoy the article, but I found myself wondering if better marbling in my steak was really worth the ethical quandry of cloning. If we have this ability, wouldn't a more ethical use of the technology be to apply it to more serious problems.
Posted by on January 22,2013 | 11:51 AM
I had a hard time reading this article because it reminds me that a person eat meat for a reason. GOD would not let us kill animals to eat if he wanted. He could have made it where they(cattle) had a taste that could have made us sick.
It is like some things are plants that can kill you. So be careful of what you eat.
Posted by Buie on August 16,2010 | 01:43 AM
Having grown up on a farm is Mississippi, I knew a lot ofthings about the cattle on our place. Dad knew everyone was named and he could tell you about each one. He hated to carry one to be sold or to the packing house. I went with him one time,that was the first & last time. I raised show cows in 4H. My brothers showed as well. I will never forget the steer that my brother showed. We were not told that "BIG-BOY" would be sold after the show. We all were expecting to carry him home. He was more like a big puppy to us.
I already knew about the meat line and now it was coming home hard. I know how Donnell felt how he was hoping for his prayer to be answered.
Posted by Elizabeth on August 16,2010 | 01:31 AM
Carol LeKashman - Laskas leaves us hanging regarding the fate of the embryos because it is still unknown. The cows were inseminated this spring and should calve this coming winter. Then the calves (hopefully they get some bull calves) have to grow and mature before the Browns will know if they have anything like Revelation again. Agriculture--it's one big waiting game. :)
Sara--married into a farming and small-time Angus-producing family.
Posted by Sara on June 8,2010 | 04:57 PM
I also agree with those critical of the article. The good thing about it, I suppose, is that it may help expose the greed and insensitivity involved in modern industrial meat production.
Posted by Terry Thorkildson on May 25,2010 | 11:11 AM
Although this article carefully avoids describing where the cows ultimately end up (feed lots were only very briefly mentioned), it's a great and informative piece. Another article that follows a cow through out its life, including the feed lot process, can be found at http://www.nytimes.com/2002/03/31/magazine/power-steer.html?pagewanted=all
For anyone who consumes store-bought beef in America, both this article and the one linked above are worth reading. It's important to know what you're putting in your mouth and where it came from.
Posted by Ashley on May 14,2010 | 02:49 PM
I found the article a wonderful expose. However, I was astonished that the prize bull that was given such exquisite care was so quickly turned to hamburger. All this love and attention from Donnell was only based on $$s. Couldn't Revelation at least be allowed to graze freely for the rest of his life?
Posted by stan adams on May 14,2010 | 12:53 PM
I also agree with Elena Brodskaya. I was quite shocked to see the beef industry so shamelessly romanticized in this day and age. Most cows and bulls in the United States are not raised on bucolic family farms, as Ms. Laskas' article suggests. According to Farm Sanctuary, a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the lives of farm animals, just four large corporations control over eighty percent of the cattle slaughtered in our country, and these animals are treated in the most cruel, inhumane, and disgusting ways one could possibly imagine. The beef industry also harms humans as well as animals, by degrading the environment and putting scarce water and land resources to inefficient use.
In respectful response to Pat Jones, I would like to add that I am a strict ethical vegan who is also pro-choice regarding abortion. The reason for this is that I take a compassionate view of all life, and that includes adult women as well as fetuses. What I find interesting as another, similar example of cognitive dissonance, is that many people who are "pro-life" regarding fetuses are also in favor of the death penalty for adult criminals.
Posted by Maureen Friel on April 28,2010 | 04:18 AM
It is a true testament to the brilliance of a writer that a 30 year vegetarian (me!) could be riveted by an article about beef! And, Jeanne Marie Laskas' writing drew me in and held me tight....wouldn't let go until I finished every last word. Will I eat beef? No. But, the article was fascinating and insightful. Thanks Smithsonian and Ms. Laskas! Keep up the good work.
peace.
Posted by Robin on April 23,2010 | 02:23 PM
This method of food production is anachronistic, and it ultimately can't be sustained. It is as anachronistic as those comments invoking "god". Modern society must be run on reason, not ancient superstitions. Levitican law sanctions human slavery, yet that has been rejected.
Posted by Boregence on April 16,2010 | 02:47 PM
A fantastic article, very interesting: but HOW COULD YOU LEAVE US HANGING AS TO THE FATE OF THE EMBRYOS?
Posted by Carol LeKashman on April 15,2010 | 08:07 PM
Beautifully written article which shows respect for the people and animals involved. I had already heard from my son and daughter-in-law what a well-respected operation the RA Ranch is. Interesting views from Elena and Moira and I recognize their right to express them. However, I just have to wonder how they feel about abortion, since very often those who are so radical about the food chain products don't blink an eye at killing human infants. Just wondering.
Thanks for an accurate, insightful article with integrity.
Posted by Pat Jones on April 14,2010 | 05:38 PM
Jeanne Marie Laskas wrote an excellent story about a family who love their work and contribute greatly to the beef industry. I am so sorry that Elena Brodskaya wrote such a hateful criticism of Jeanne Laskas work. God says man is to take dominion over the animals. Not for us to take dominion over other people by scathing remarks. Elena calm down so we can love you. Sincerely, paul price
Posted by paul price on April 12,2010 | 07:53 PM
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