 |
The importance of Shetland cattle to the Shetland people cannot be overstated. Families with fathers and husbands at sea most of the time clung precariously to life with little in the way o surplus. The only consistently nutritious food young children had after they left their mothers’ breast was the milk of the ubiquitous little house cow. Cattle produced the dung to give the soil fertility and oxen provided the muscle to help till the land. |
A document from the estate of a Shetland laird, Gideon Gifford of Busta, illustrates that in 1771 there was a considerable trade in hiring out cows and working oxen to his tenants. At the time cows showed an average value of around £12 Scots and trained oxen as much as £27 Scots at sales at Voe and Braehoulland in Shetland. (A Scots pound was worth in the region of an English shilling) |
Samuel Hibbert's Account |
Samuel Hibbert, writing in 1822, gives a more extensive account of Shetland cattle and their uses from evidence he amassed as he travelled from isle to isle. “These animals have long, small horns, and are of a brindled white, brown or black colour, rarely displaying an uniform hue”. |
Hibbert’s description of the cattle housing reveals a system which remained largely unchanged in some poorer areas until the beginning of the twentieth century. “Upon the conclusion of the ling fishery ……… the Shetlander repairs to his scathold, and cuts down a large quantity of grass and short heath, which he spreads abroad upon the hills to dry; it is afterwards stored within the enclosure of his small farm, being piled into stacks like hay ……… the heath is strewed along the floor of the byre, for the purpose of being well mingled with the dung that accumulates from the cows. The wet stratum is then covered over with a layer of duff mould, or dry decomposed moss, which substance in like manner, remains until it is well moistened with dung that falls ….. Successive strata of heather and mould, mixed with the ordure of the animal, are allowed to accumulate to a considerable height, until the pile attains such an elevation, that its removal is necessary, in order that the cattle may find sufficient head-room beneath the roof of the byre …………. When the compost is removed, it is well blended together with a spade, and is then adapted to the land destined for cultivation.” (A friend of mine tells about being sent to pick up a cow from the croft of an old lady who has no longer able to look after the animal. When he arrived the cow was looking at them through the thatched roof of the byre, having eaten through the straw thatch. Upon entering the byre, he realised the floor had risen so much with the buildup of dung and bedding that the cow was now standing up among the roof trusses.) |
Fertilser |
Recent scientific investigation into soil types down through the ages reveals that during the Neolithic and Bronze Ages not a lot of dung was applied to the cultivated land; the evidence is mainly of household waste. This does not mean that early farmers did not realise the benefits of cattle muck for the land, but that with only a small number of animals being retained close to the homesteads on a permanent basis there was not a large quantity of dung on hand to spread on the crops. |
During the Iron Age, agriculture became organised, with at least some of the by-now more diminutive cows being housed. This would have necessitated the cleaning out of these houses periodically and the dung being stored in middens or dung heaps where its value would be enhanced by decomposition, thus becoming the principle source of fertiliser. Later as we enter the Norse period, seaweed became an important element, being gathered off the beaches after the winter storms. |
Soil samples from the crofting period show more domestic waste than dung, this being a reflection of the population increase with people living in more numerous but smaller units. These findings are not entirely as one would have expected, but they give us a picture of how climate and population pressures can affect agricultural technique. |
Byproducts |
Hibbert also explains butter making, which may seem an innocuous subject, but historically it was a contentious matter. This was due to the fact that for several centuries over half the land rents paid to the Norse and subsequent landowners were paid in butter. But the quality of this butter was notorious as being “fit for little more than greasing cart wheels.” This continued despite an Act of Parliament being drawn up to fine those who produced poor butter filled with hairs, curds or other dirt. |
The traditional Shetland diet included some beef. Before salt became widely available as a preservative, the meat was air-dried in small stone buildings called ‘skoes’ through which the wind could blow freely. |
Until the early twentieth century, Shetlanders generally wore a kind of leather mocassin called a ‘rivlin’. This was made from the hides of the cattle with the hair left on, and uncured so as to give a degree of waterproofing. Large quantities of calfskins were exported at times, indicating the numbers of calves were being slaughtered so as not to be a drain on milk supplies. |
Horn was used as a material for making spoons and cups. One unusual use for entire horns was as “ludder horns,” which fishermen took to sea on their boats. In fog or poor visibility, when crews were far from land, they would blow these horns to make contact with other boats. Times change, but clearly throughout history Shetlanders learned to make use of every last piece of their cattle, both living and dead. |
Oxens place in Shetland's History |
As draught animals, oxen were the strongest available, and good ones were highly prized. They were kept for many years before eventually being slaughtered or sold. |
Hibbert speaks of Shetlanders ploughing with four oxen abreast in two double yokes, which were attached to the plough by 20 fete of chain. Up till the twentieth century ploughing was done with two men, one holding the trams of the plough, and the other leading and coaxing the oxen. Usually each house kept only one ox, others being borrowed for the day’s work. Apart from ploughing, oxen were used to haul carts of heavier goods like peats for fuel. |
My grand uncle, who lived in Fair Isle halfway between Orkney and Shetland, often told stories about problems with oxen. Apparently an ox didn’t like walking on gravel tracks because its feet became sore, being unshod. If left unattached it would gradually creep over on to the softer grassy edge of the track with the result that the cart, usually containing peats, would overturn into the ditch. Like Shetland ponies, the oxen do not like the heat, therefore the Shetlanders started their work in the cool of the early morning. |
Accounts suggest that oxen and cattle in general were bigger and in better condition in Shetland than Orkney before the beginning of the nineteenth century. The Rev.Low concluded that this was due to the importation of “better” or bigger stock from across the North Sea, which more readily came to Shetland as the closest landfall and most important link for seafaring traders. However, to a visitor today it would be hard to envisage Shetland having bigger and fatter stock than Orkney’s green and fertile land. The old wooden bow yokes to which the oxen were harnessed were gradually replaced during the nineteenth century by all-leather collars. These were still in use in the early twentieth century. |
Beasts of Burden |
Since even primitive fences and dykes were expensive to erect in both itme and resources, and boundaries around crofts were numerous, Shetlanders had to teach their cattle to behave on a halter and tether. They developed a kind of rope halter called a “branks” which has never really been improved upon. It was made of two wooden cheek pieces through which homemade rope was threaded loosely. The branks was adjusted to suit whatever size of beast by varying the width between the cheek pieces. The tethering end was always left to run loose through the cheek pieces so as to control the animal. When it pulled on the tether the strain drew the hard wooden sides quickly together, nipping the animal’s nose and thereby teaching it a lesson. (Sometimes unruly animals also had a half hitch around one ear; thankfully this practice is no longer continued) |
The tether itself had a “swill” or swivel partway along its length to hinder the rope from becoming “snooded,” hopelessly twisted. At the end of the tether was a wooden or metal stake, which was driven into the ground. Tethered animals were moved quite frequently throughout the day to get to water or fresh grazing. A grand aunt of mine was said to “flit” her cows so often for their comfort that it was a wonder they had a chance to eat. |
Times of dearth |
During the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries there were a number of periods of starvation when it was documented that many cattle, sheep and ponies died. Apart from the increased pressure of population growth there was a change in the climate which led to many crop failures, and consequent shortages of winter keep. |
Weakened cows led to families sometimes having to lift the cow daily to its feet in the byre in springtime. Finally, they might have had to carry her out onto the green, when the fresh growth of grass came. |
Every kind of edible material was given to the cows at these times. Hibbert tells of a feed of mash made up of boiled and crushed fish bones. A kind of seaweed, called ‘hinniewaar’ was given sparingly either fresh or parboiled. In the byre, cows were fed little and often with small sheaves of oats followed by some root crop such as kale, small potatoes or turnips. Meadow hay was also provided, along with the chaff that remained from threshing. |
In early history, while the human population was smaller, large numbers of cattle would have been outwintered partly because there were simply not enough buildings to house them, and partly because with fewer animals and a kinder climate there was more vegetation on the hills in wintertime. It is quite possible that during these earlier times the Shetland cattle were of a slightly beefier type, more suited to being outwintered, since the needs of the farmers were different then. During times of dearth the cattle were sometimes bled to provide a nutritious family meal made with oatmeal and milk. |