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 3 of 8)
All three of Donnell’s siblings, and their spouses, share ownership of the ranch with him and Kelli. She serves as marketing maven and quiet, sturdy voice of wisdom—and as president of the Red Angus Association of America. Ranch headquarters is the small red house where Donnell grew up and now lives with Kelli and their two teenage boys, Tucker and Lanham.
In the end, Donnell decided no, he would not give up on Revelation. He would try to save his masterpiece. So he hauled the bull away in a trailer and drove five hours to a veterinary hospital near Austin, where he learned that Revelation had torn two ligaments, the anterior cruciate and medial collateral, in its right rear knee. “Nothing we can do for him here,” the vet said, pointing Donnell to specialists at Kansas State University, 11 hours away. So Donnell got in the truck and drove. Revelation was like Barbaro, the racehorse. If ever there was an animal worth going the extra mile for, it was Revelation.
“We can try to construct a new knee,” the Kansas vet said, with only vague encouragement in his voice. “Sure, we can try.”
Donnell’s parents, Rob and Peggy, used to live in the red ranch house, but in 1998 they retired to the fancy house in town with the big columns out front, just as Rob’s parents had done before them. Before she married Rob, Peggy’s name was Peggy Donnell, and that’s how Donnell got his name.
Rob, now 74, is himself legendary in the beef world; he played a vital role in determining the kind of steak America now eats. He came of age when the Hereford was the cattle of choice for the U.S. beef industry—a reliable, thrifty breed with far more muscle than the Texas Longhorn, its predecessor as America’s main beef cow.
At Texas Tech, Rob had learned of a brave new world. “Continental breeds!” he said to his father, R. A., after he came home with his degree in agriculture in 1958. Breed a Hereford with, say, a Brown Swiss and get a larger carcass with, perhaps, the same quality meat—or better! Rob had other ideas, other breeds, other dreams. R.A., a man of tradition, would have none of it. Not until 1965 did he give Rob his reluctant blessing to crossbreed; within days, he died of a heart attack. If he hadn’t given his assent, the ranch never would have enjoyed its explosive success in creating better and better meat.
Rob crossed a Hereford with a Brown Swiss and sure enough, he got cattle fully 100 pounds heavier at weaning, with the same hardiness as a Hereford. “Brilliant!” he thought. But the market did not quite agree. The cattle were not uniform in color, like the good old-fashioned amber Herefords. Some were brindle and some were gray. Coat color has nothing whatsoever to do with carcass quality, but even so, Rob’s cattle were discounted at auction because they looked funny.
So Rob got back to work. He mixed his Herefords with Simmental, a different Swiss breed, and that solved the color problem. To that hybrid he added Simbrah, a Simmental-Brahman mix, to create cattle with heat tolerance. He added Red Angus for marbling. He got a planeload of Senepol from the Virgin Islands to add a gentle demeanor. And by 1989 he had a hybrid called the Hotlander, which is still popular among some breeding connoisseurs.
By then Rob’s son, Donnell, was at Texas Tech, studying genetics. It’s the Throckmorton way, after you grow up cowboying and playing football for the Throckmorton High Greyhounds (2005 state six-man champions!).
When he came home with his degree in 1993, Donnell said, “Dad, it’s better to be on the leading edge than the bleeding edge.” His father may have been ahead of his time, Donnell thought. He was creating superior beef, absolutely, but not necessarily beef the marketplace understood. Donnell brought science back from Texas Tech, but he also brought marketing.
Never a place for subtleties, the market understood one thing: Angus. Over the past quarter-century, brilliant marketing by the American Angus Association has made the word “Angus” synonymous with “best steak in the world.” Specifically Black Angus, even though Red and Black Angus carcasses are indistinguishable without the hide. But the American Angus Association promoted black, and so in today’s market, solid black cattle, for reasons almost entirely psychological, bring top dollar.
“We have to create the meat that people want to buy!” was, and remains, Donnell’s main point. Rob agrees, of course, but on the other hand he has the soul of an inventor and can’t stop thinking of awesome new things to try. The father is the boy in this relationship. Donnell: buttoned-up, doing the right thing, selling it with a smile. Rob: trial and error and joy.
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Comments (32)
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
I sent your magazine with this article in to to my "cow" friends. They both said if anyone had a bull of this magnitude there would be no way he would be put out to pasture with other bulls. They said it didn't make sence for Mr. Brown to do that. What happened?
Posted by Roberta Wallace on April 10,2010 | 10:14 PM
Like Elena Brodskaya I found the article disgusting.
I could not read it to the end however. I just can't bear to look at the meat counters displaying parts of somegentle creature.
Not an article I expected to find in the Smithsonian.
Posted by Moira Eicholtz on April 8,2010 | 12:13 AM
Sometimes Texans take their college rivalries too far. Hauling a bull to Kansas for surgery instead of Texas A&M's world class Vet School could only be chalked up to anti-Aggie bias.
Posted by LM Yager on April 8,2010 | 07:38 PM
Forgive me if I don't gush in over-salivated terms about this disgusting article. In fact I had to make myself read it all the way to the end in order to be able to write this. I started counting the ways in which not only this article but the subject matter itself is wrong. The answer? Way too many. There is nothing poetic about the slavery and misery of the animals who are only bred for profit and ultimately steak (the horrible line where the "prized" bull became 1200 lbs of hamburger gave me nightmares), playing God in some ghastly Dr. Moreau fashion trying to control the genetic makeup of the animals (somehow human cloning hasn't caught on yet), and the number of calves they produce and many many more. Cows and bulls are gentle creatures (as the author pointed out, right before she said what great steak they make), who interact in socially complex ways including friendships that develop over time. But the author chose to overlook this fact blinded by the profits they make the ranchers. There is no love, or respect that shown the animals in this article, and of course, on the ranch - they are merely objects, like furniture that are being tampered with and experimented on. As if their lives are not just as precious as human lives. When we read about slavery and human trafficking and lack of human rights in the world it is considered morally wrong. Why is it that reading about the same situations and conditions in animal lives makes it okay??? God did not give humans dominion over animals, He made us keepers of the realm, to live in harmony and peace with all species. I only hope that your readers will skip the steak after reading this article and eat a plate full of beans instead.
Posted by Elena Brodskaya on April 8,2010 | 08:25 AM
My dad went to all the Brown's bull sales from the first one til he died (in 2000). Just before the sale started, he often had a small boy with him telling him all about each bull...in great and glowing detail. That small boy was Donnell Brown. Even then it was apparent what a natural salesman he was.
If there is in Texas( or anywhere in America, for that matter) a representative of what a ranch family should be, it is the R.A.Brown family.
Posted by Tom Blakeney,Jr. on April 7,2010 | 02:13 PM
This was a great article! Certainly, for me it was a celebration of the American family farm. The following statistic from your article was a welcome surprise: "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." I am one of those cow-calf operations that is an independant ranches with fewer than 50 head (Buhler, KS).
Posted by Willmar T. Harder on April 6,2010 | 12:18 PM
Thank you very much for the beautiful, poetic portrait of today's rancher and his balance of heritage and technology to produce quality food. The video is lovely and complementary. I hope your readers will be more confident and understanding about beef's nutrition and food safety. explorebeef.org. You'll also like these personal portraits about rural life near Lake Tahoe, CA. http://artofregionalchange.ucdavis.edu/
Posted by Karen Sweet on April 5,2010 | 11:48 PM
THANK YOU, Jeanne Marie Laskas and Smithsonian magazine, for this insightful journey to where beef comes from and the people who bring it to us...hard working family farmers and ranchers like the Browns. Combining American ingenuity with the tradition and legacy of the cowboy, today's beef farmers and ranchers produce a year-round supply of safe, wholesome and nutritious beef at a price that makes it possible to enjoy beef every day. And knowing that lean beef provides 10 essential nutrients and vitamins, including 51% of our daily protein needs, in one 3 oz serving and only 180 calories, we can feel good about enjoying beef every day (and not just for diiner!).
Posted by Daren WIlliams on April 1,2010 | 12:44 PM
Well, I'm a Minnesotan always have been and always will be. I raise angus and am commonly called a cowboy. Up here its not common for someone to walk in with a cowboy hat to a Wal-Mart. This article though makes me step back and take another look at my profession. I'd like to thank all other cattle breeders and owners around the nation, farmers and cowboys. I'm 18 and looking forward to owning my own operation in the future after college.
Posted by Darren DeRaad on March 30,2010 | 10:24 PM
Awesome article, great read! Thoroughly enjoyed reading this story.
While the pronounciation sounds like "seeder," it is actually an acronymn, CIDR, which stands for controlled internal drug release.
Posted by tl on March 30,2010 | 11:40 AM
I so enjoyed and appreciated this article - and I was, admittedly, astonished to find it in Smithsonian. I recently married into an Angus cow/calf operation, and my learning curve has been precipitously steep. I'm a city girl by birth and a photographer by occupation. But, believe me, I've been seen more often in the past 3 yrs running the headgate, holding the AI glove, or trying to help a clueless calf find the teats. Quite the romantic dating experience! From the very first, I was smitten, much to the shock of my friends & family. You have captured the flavor, the feel of the whole ranching experience. It was as though you were in that man's pocket for years in the writing of this. Thank you so much for painting such perfectly poetic and accurate imagery.
Posted by Angela Gambill Neese on March 30,2010 | 10:27 AM
Two words: Great story! Being from a midwest city, I have no clue what it is like living on a ranch, nor the interseting issues that you have before you: such as engineering the perfect bull. I learned alot from it, and wish to thank you for taking the time to write it and share it with us.
Posted by Andrew on March 29,2010 | 03:27 PM
I hope to use this story in my four 12th grade Film Analysis classes. We are currently studying the western genre and have been using the book, Cowboy Ethics as supplimental reading.
After reading this excellent piece about modern day ranching, I am asking my 120 urban,southern California students to develop arguments about why Donnell Brown should or should not clone Revelation. I hope there is a story to follow to let all of us know how calving went this Spring and whether Donnell still feels the same way about cloning his perfect bull.
Devon Day, LBUSD
Posted by Devon Day on March 28,2010 | 04:24 PM
I live on a seed stock cattle ranch, and I can really relate to this article. I am only 16, but the ranching lifestyle has been a huge part of my life. This article did an excellent job of depicting the ranch lifestyle and the people that are a part of it. Cattle ranchers are some of the most caring and sincere people that I've ever been around. The cows become like part of the family. As a whole, cattle ranchers are very often misrepresented, and subject to the abuse that PETA and other radical animal rights organizations. This article was a very good representation of ranchers, and should be required reading at any steakhouse before the meal is served!!
Posted by Troy Rowan on March 27,2010 | 05:15 PM
A most interesting and informative great article about beef cattle development and the families behind it all.For a wanabe rancher its a great read. As a sideline I have had a small herd for many years. Progressive Farmer has been my main farm magazine. Smithsonian really surprized me.Thank you so very much.
Posted by paul price on March 26,2010 | 12:00 PM
I was so pleased with your article "Breeding The Perfect Bull". I have lived in Texas for 17 years now. Although I have never been a part of the ranching lifestyle, I admire and respect these hard working families. The American culture has lost it's respect for the "cowboy". The agricultural community is so often the subject of stereotypes and jokes. From Hollywood to New York publishers, this vital portion of our country and our economy recieves frequent disrespect and misrepresentation. Thank you for an article that gave these deserving men and women such respect.
Posted by Kristi Boyd on March 25,2010 | 06:30 PM
An excellently well-written article! It combines the scientific, experienced and difficult-to-understand aspects of Beef Cattle breeding into easily understood common, everyday language.
DOC HARRIS
Posted by DOC HARRIS on March 24,2010 | 08:32 PM
This article is a revelation in its own right! Thank you!
Posted by Shir-El on March 21,2010 | 02:51 PM