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NGUNI CATTLE BREED | CALVES | BULLS

Price Determination for Nguni cows | Heifers | Calves |Bulls (FOB US$ PRICE):

    ✔️Bottle-feeding calves of between 6 and 8 weeks $350 each
    ✔️Older calves(Weaned) $650 each
    ✔️Yearling cows $850 each
    ✔️Pregnant heifers $1200 each
    ✔️Bulls ( Adults) $900 each

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Description

Size and Mass

Nguni Bulls are of medium size weighing 500 – 800 kg. The average shoulder height of Phase C bulls (=15 months) is + 120cm. Cows are smallish and weigh 300 – 480 kg. Their body length is + 130 cm and height at shoulder + 119 cm.

Horns

Horns are crescent-shaped in bulls and characteristically lyre-shaped, thinner and longer in mature females. They are round in cross-section and dark, especially at the tips.

Hump

The hump is situated cervico-thoracially and is muscular in structure. The size and shape of the hump is reasonably well developed in bulls especially after 3 years, but in females is only evidence in individual animals in good condition.

Hide and Hair

The Nguni breed has a well-pigmented, motile hide of medium thickness and the coat is short, fine and glossy (oily). The coal patterns are legion and warrant a separate descriptive catalogue but black, red, dun, roan, speckled and patched animals are acceptable. Poor and unpigmented animals are discriminated against.

Colours

The majority of Nguni cattle breed have pigmented hides and dark, if not black, hooves and muzzles. The coat shows a variety of colours which may appear as whole colours, mixed colours or as specific colour patterns.Six whole coat colours unders which white (Umhlope), black (Mnyama), Brown (Emfusi), Red (Embomvu), Dun (Mdaka) and Yellow (Mpofu) exist in Nguni cattle, while eight colour patterns occur. The Zulu names appear in brackets. Besides the fact that there are theoretically 48 colour patterns the Zulu and Swazi people describe 77 different colour patterns in order to ease identification and ownership of cattle. These different colours and colour patterns are playing a very important role in the social and cultural life of the African people. There is no dobut that the variety of colours, and the combination thereof, have something to do with the excellent adaptability of the breed under the high temperature and dry or humid climatic conditions of Southern Africa.The colourful red and white speckled animals are the most popular animals. However, the inheritance of Nguni cattle are somewhat complicated which makes it impossible to select solely for a certain favourable colour. The Nguni hides have very impressive and attractive colour patterns and can therefore be sold as a byproduct to be used for fashion articles.

Characteristics

Nguni Cattle Breed Adaptability and Hardiness
Having survived many years of exposure to climatic and other environmental extremes such as internal and external parasites, suboptimal grazing conditions and primitive management practices the Nguni has developed as a heat tolerant, disease and tick resistant breed.

Fertility

Nguni cattle seems to be the most fertile beef breed in Southern Africa (and most probably in the world). Nguni cows registered at the Namibian Stud Breeders Association obtained an average inter calving period (ICP) of 402 days despite the severe drought conditions experienced during the nineties.

Ease of Calving

Ngunis calve easily. Calves of both sexes are small at birth weighing 26kg on average or 7.5% of the mothers’ mass. Calving difficulties are also extremely rare due to conformational features such as the sloping rump in females and the significant maternal restriction on birth mass.

 

Nguni cattle have the following qualities, characteristics and traits:

 

  1. They are not large cattle with bulls weighing 500-700kg (~1100-1550 lbs.) and cows weighing 320-440kg (~700-975 lbs.). Calves wean at approximately 175kg (~385 lbs.) and grow at 0.70 kg (~1.55 lbs) per day until weaning.

     

  2. The bulls have well developed, rounded cervio-thoracic humps which are muscular rather than fatty. The cows have small almost non existant humps.

     

  3. The cattle are heat and light tolerant and have thick pigmented skins covered with fine short hair of different mixtures of colour (Black, white, red, brown, cream and dun).

     

  4. They have long productive lives, cows will produce 10 or more calves calving regularly. The cows show great efficiency and often wean calves that weigh 45-50% of their body mass.

     

  5. Nguni cattle are less prone to dystocia, this being ascribed to their sloping rumps, small uterus and low birth mass.

     

  6. They develop excellent resistance to ticks and immunity to tick borne diseases. Disease incidence and mortality are low.

     

  7. They are excellent foragers and will graze and browse on steep slopes and in thick bush alike.

     

  8. Finished carcasses dress out at roughly 180-220 kg (~400-500 lbs). Marbling is good with a thin covering of fat.

     

  9. Nguni fatten well on natural grazing as well as in the feedlot.

     

  10. The historical development of the Nguni has resulted in a breed with good temperament and mothering ability.