If you cross a billy goat over a sheep (ewe) you get a geep .. geep meat. Absolutely true. A farm I once supervised for a corporation had a few errant billy goats who successfully ventured into new pastures. For a while we thought of using this terminal out crossing to develop a more lean goat like tasting meat for the local Indian restaurant trade.
If you cross cattle with buffalo you get a cattlelo .. cattlelo meat was once going to be the new thing in farming except the animals weren't as docile as they thought.
Now b4 I am reminded that these animals have different chromosome numbers & shouldn't be able to be bred then think of zebras & horses, horses & donkeys, resulting in mules etc. Usually they're sterile but not always so.
Sheet meat therefore must be the reverse cross of a ram over a doe & probably would have satisfied the Indian trade just as well. Otherwise it could be sheep meat that tastes like crap which is more likely.
Unexplained Mysteries
Moderator: scott
re: Unexplained Mysteries
Last edited by Fletcher on Fri May 26, 2006 5:30 am, edited 1 time in total.
re: Unexplained Mysteries
Yes Terry, there is a huge difference. The growth of cultured meat basically takes place inside of a test tube, not inside of a living animal. Therefore it is more humane, more effecient, cleaner, and healthier than any of our current industrial meat-producing methods.terry5732 wrote:Are you saying this 'sheet meat' is something different from Oscar Meyer Bologna?
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"Liberty is the Mother, not the Daughter of Order."
- Pierre Proudhon, 1881
"To forbid us anything is to make us have a mind for it."
- Michel de Montaigne, 1559
"So easy it seemed, once found, which yet unfound most would have thought impossible!"
- John Milton, 1667
"Liberty is the Mother, not the Daughter of Order."
- Pierre Proudhon, 1881
"To forbid us anything is to make us have a mind for it."
- Michel de Montaigne, 1559
"So easy it seemed, once found, which yet unfound most would have thought impossible!"
- John Milton, 1667
re: Unexplained Mysteries
In the USA they are called beefalos. I occasionally see them on farms around here.Fletcher wrote:If you cross cattle with buffalo you get a cattlelo .. cattlelo meat was once going to be the new thing in farming except the animals weren't as docile as they thought.
A few weeks ago I saw the strangest herd of cows; they were all 'belted' or 'sheeted' black cows with wide white belts. I found later that they are Belted Galloway, originally from Scottland.
re: Unexplained Mysteries
Yes, we have Belted Galloway's here also though they are more a boutique breed. The main hill country beef breeds are still Angus & Hereford & then all the imported breeds such as Limousine, Charolais, Belgium Blue's & a raft of others. Cross breeding to another breed provides about 10 % additional growth & meat thru hybrid vigour which translates directly to more revenue per hectare.
The cattlelo experiments were with water buffalo rather than bison though this has been done also.
You can probably tell I like a piece of steak or two :)
The cattlelo experiments were with water buffalo rather than bison though this has been done also.
You can probably tell I like a piece of steak or two :)
re: Unexplained Mysteries
Are you gonna try and convince me Bologna once had sumpin to do with livestock?!
re: Unexplained Mysteries
No!
But you cannot buy Polish Sausage, Goats milk and Head cheese in a hardware store either.
Ralph
But you cannot buy Polish Sausage, Goats milk and Head cheese in a hardware store either.
Ralph