I'll repeat the warning I put up every time we butcher: DO NOT READ THIS POST if you are vegetarian or have a squeamish stomach. This post shows pictures of some animals being butchered. I don't want anyone complaining that they weren't adequately warned about the graphic nature of these photos.
Okay?
Okay. That said, this morning we butchered our steer, Thor, and our bull calf, Atlas.
The most challenging part of butchering animals is getting them confined to the barn the day before the butchers come, and keeping them there. Through harsh experience we've learned that trying to round up an animal on the actual the day it's due to be dispatched is stressful, frustrating, and often a failure.
And even when we cleverly get an animal confined the night before is no guarantee he'll be there in the morning. Last summer when we butchered our heifer Smokey, she escaped the barn during the night, jumped two gates, plowed through three fences, and went gamboling across the neighbor's pasture by the time I found her at dawn the next morning. Grrrr, was I ever glad to put that girl in the freezer.
Thor, who is Matilda's two-year-old steer, has been growing more and more snarky over the last few months. He's big, and has been plowing down fences with abandon. We know from experience that an animal with an unpleasant disposition isn't going to improve; far better to stop feeding him and let him feed us.
We originally purchased Atlas when he was a few days old from a neighbor, thinking we would raise him to become our new herd sire. However our old bull Gimli was his father, meaning he has a bit too much relatedness to our girls. Once we got our new bull Samson, poor little Atlas became surplus. He's very sweet-natured and rather small for his age (he's about 17 months old). We thought we had a buyer for him, but no such luck.
Anyway, in anticipation of the mobile butchers who were due to arrive this morning, we needed to maneuver the herd out of the pasture and back toward the house (and barn). But before we could do that, we needed to make some infrastructure improvements.
Last week we bit the bullet and bought eight more cattle panels (cha-ching!). They're expensive but oh my, they're wonderful. Instant (and sturdy) fences wherever you need them.
We wanted to block the cattle from getting into the garden, the chicken coop, and the hay barn. So we trotted the cattle panels around and put in temporary U-nails to keep them in place.
Here the barn and all that tempting hay is walled off.
Next step: the old barn. It sustained some severe damage during a windstorm a couple months ago. The barn was built with cheap T1-11 sheets and gets damaged all the time. Time to patch it, at least temporarily, since the area on the right is where Thor will be locked up for the night.
We nailed one of the T1-11 sheets lengthwise across the wall, then put a cattle panel across the top. We also reinforced several spots inside that we felt Thor could push through if he was agitated enough.
This pretty much wiped out Don, who still doesn't have his full strength back from last week's kidney failure.
But at this point all that was left to do was trot down and close our driveway gate.
Then I walked to the pasture gate and yelled "Bossy bossy bossy bossy bossy!" -- which is our universal cattle call. Immediately the critters came running.
As usual, Brit was the first through the gate.
As the neighbor's horses watched, all the other cattle came barreling through in short order.
At first everyone congregated in the back of the barn before scattering around the driveway area.
We left the barn door invitingly open. Sure enough Thor, being the curious creature that he is, went in to investigate and I closed the door behind him. One down, one to go.
Atlas was a little more wily but was unable to resist exploring Matilda's stall, the door of which I left invitingly open. Soon he too was where he needed to be. Whoo-hoo, success! And fairly painless too! No rodeos this time.
We left the rest of the livestock in the driveway for the night, and all night long we were serenaded by bellows from Thor and Atlas. I also spent the night stressing. I always do this the day before, and the morning of, butchering -- stress that the doomed critter(s) will make an escape. We checked constantly to see if either animal was breaking out of the barn, but it actually -- and let the record show, this is the first time -- held, and no one escaped. Atlas, however, did an absolute number on Matilda's stall -- trashed it -- and managed to escape into Thor's area, but since he couldn't escape from Thor's side, they were within easy dispatch reach.
Potlatch Pack, the best mobile butchers in the region, came on the dot of 10 am this morning. Their specialized rig is self-contained with water, power, and all their tools.
On the side of the rig are barrels for waste.
Within minutes, both animals were down. These men know precisely where to place the bullet so the animal drops instantly with hardly a twitch and certainly without suffering. They chained the animals up one by one to get them out of the barn. First order is to drain the blood, then take off the head followed by the feet. (Mel is on the right, and his nephew Chance is on the left.)
Then they start skinning. I've never seen anyone who could skin as quickly and perfectly. Comes from sheer practice, of course.
They always make sure the tough Achilles tendons are exposed because they use them for hanging the carcass later on.
Today has been a day of wild shrieking wind (gusts up to 60 mph) but the men were cheerful as they worked. "At least it's not blowing snow," said Mel.
Over his waterproof apron, each man wore a belt from which dangled a plastic holster for their knives...
...and a knife sharpener. The sharpener is constantly in use.
Within short order, the carcasses were partially skinned and ready to gut.
But first they have to cut through the ribcage, which they do with a specialized chain saw. They have to be careful not to cut any of the internal organs, which could taint the meat.
They insert a stout metal bracket through the tendons on the back legs so the animal can be partially hoisted. Lifting the animal makes it far easier to gut, finish skinning, and then halve the carcass.
Once the carcass is hoisted, they gut it.
We have a neighbor who adores fresh liver, so they put the liver aside for her.
Next they cut through the backbone.
Here they're hosing down the carcass. The men hose down everything, constantly: themselves, their aprons, their knives, the carcass, the truck... they keep everything squeaky-clean.
They can finally finish detaching the hide. This is almost the last step.
They put the hide in one of the side barrels.
They sell the hide to an outfit in Spokane that bundles them into thousand-hide lots and ships them to the Orient, where they're processed into leather. This surprised me, but Chance told me there are no more large-scale tanneries in America any more.
"It amazes me how many manufacturing jobs we've lost," I commented.
Chase gave a small bitter smile. "And they're just beginning to realize the impact," he said, thus proving that every blue-collar worker in America "gets" what our politicians don't.
It didn't take long for all four carcass halves to be wheeled into the interior of the truck.
Then the cleanup began. I took the tub of blood onto the compost pile with the intent of pouring it around (blood is a superb compost activator)...
...but the blood had already congealed into a gelatinous mass. So I left it. The chickens will probably scratch around in it, but the wind was shrieking too hard to fuss with it for now.
Chase emptied the contents of the stomachs into the now-empty tub. This too will go onto the compost pile.
He found a couple of hairballs in the stomach contents. "They're harmless," he said, "and it's too bad these are soft hairballs. Hard hairballs are worth money." Go figure.
All the leftover stuff -- unused organs, hooves, heads, etc. -- were put in the waste barrels. This material is trucked to a rendering plant.
From start to finish, butchering two animals took the men one and three-quarters hours. They have another stop at a neighbor's for a steer, then another stop for two more animals in a small town south of us, before they make their way back to their facility. There the meat hangs in a cooler for ten days, after which they cut and wrap it. In about two weeks, we'll get ground beef, stew meat, and lots of different cuts of steak and roasts, all organic grass-fed beef. Yum!
We don't know what the hanging weight is yet, but I'm guessing it's at least 750 lbs. between the two animals.
I've said it before and I'll say it again: these men and the service they offer exemplifies all that is BEST in America. They work hard and do a dirty job in sometimes adverse weather conditions; and they do it cleanly, humanely, and cheerfully.
I wish we had more people like Potlatch Pack. Thank you once again, Mel and Chance, for your work today.
Showing posts with label Thor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thor. Show all posts
Monday, April 29, 2013
Monday, April 22, 2013
Spring fever
This is Thor (left) and Matilda. Thor is Matilda's two-year-old steer.
Lately Thor has been getting spring fever. This means he is forever bulldozing over fences in an effort to get to the grass on the other side, which everyone knows is always greener.
We have patched and patched and patched fences in Thor's wake, but he keeps bulldozing over different spots. He's so durned big, you see -- a lot bigger than our Dexters -- and frankly he's getting on everyone's nerves. In fact he has a date with the freezer next Monday and I, for one, can't wait.
So today when he bulldozed down yet another spot on the fence, we'd had it. Don is not yet up to chasing down a snarky teenage bovine determined to tick us off, so we knew we had to do something different.
So we decided to chase everyone down into the pasture. It's a month sooner than we want -- the pasture grass hasn't grown up much yet -- and putting the cows on it too soon would stunt the grass even further. But it was either that or babysit Thor until next Monday.
So... we called all the beasties, opened a gate, and got out of the way. Most of the animals know exactly where to go.
Brit was the first to dash through.
In twos or threes, the animals made a dash around the barn toward the pasture gate.
In short order, everyone was grazing hungrily in the pasture... except Atlas. He's young and not as familiar with the spring and fall routines on the farm, so he got confused and didn't make it through the gate.
Took him about an hour to find his way out and join the others.
Atlas is a surplus bull and also has a date with the freezer next Monday. Time to cull our herd a bit.
After the chaos of the morning, the cows settled into a contented afternoon. We're not going to keep them on this pasture for long -- probably just until Thor and Atlas get dispatched -- but for the time being, peace reigns once again.
Atlas was delighted with the pasture and kicked up his heels all afternoon.
Atlas and Thor are good buddies and spend a lot of time wrestling. Boys will be boys, after all.
Just one more thing to do, which was to bring the water tank into the pasture.
But first it needed a good scrubbing...
...with the help of a brush and some elbow grease.
Much better.
We'll probably keep the beasties down in the pasture until Thor and Atlas are dispatched, then shoo everyone back into the woods for a month so the pasture can grow up lush and green.
But for the moment it's nice not to have to put up with Thor's snarky shenanigans.
Lately Thor has been getting spring fever. This means he is forever bulldozing over fences in an effort to get to the grass on the other side, which everyone knows is always greener.
We have patched and patched and patched fences in Thor's wake, but he keeps bulldozing over different spots. He's so durned big, you see -- a lot bigger than our Dexters -- and frankly he's getting on everyone's nerves. In fact he has a date with the freezer next Monday and I, for one, can't wait.
So today when he bulldozed down yet another spot on the fence, we'd had it. Don is not yet up to chasing down a snarky teenage bovine determined to tick us off, so we knew we had to do something different.
So we decided to chase everyone down into the pasture. It's a month sooner than we want -- the pasture grass hasn't grown up much yet -- and putting the cows on it too soon would stunt the grass even further. But it was either that or babysit Thor until next Monday.
So... we called all the beasties, opened a gate, and got out of the way. Most of the animals know exactly where to go.
Brit was the first to dash through.
In twos or threes, the animals made a dash around the barn toward the pasture gate.
In short order, everyone was grazing hungrily in the pasture... except Atlas. He's young and not as familiar with the spring and fall routines on the farm, so he got confused and didn't make it through the gate.
Took him about an hour to find his way out and join the others.
Atlas is a surplus bull and also has a date with the freezer next Monday. Time to cull our herd a bit.
After the chaos of the morning, the cows settled into a contented afternoon. We're not going to keep them on this pasture for long -- probably just until Thor and Atlas get dispatched -- but for the time being, peace reigns once again.
Atlas was delighted with the pasture and kicked up his heels all afternoon.
Atlas and Thor are good buddies and spend a lot of time wrestling. Boys will be boys, after all.
Just one more thing to do, which was to bring the water tank into the pasture.
But first it needed a good scrubbing...
...with the help of a brush and some elbow grease.
Much better.
We'll probably keep the beasties down in the pasture until Thor and Atlas are dispatched, then shoo everyone back into the woods for a month so the pasture can grow up lush and green.
But for the moment it's nice not to have to put up with Thor's snarky shenanigans.
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