Guest guest Posted January 24, 2001 Report Share Posted January 24, 2001 " The Advantages to Be Derived from a More Extended Use of Oxen" Excerpts from an essay found in the Farmers' Barn Book by Clayter 1843 >From the ISCOWP News Vol. 10 Issue 3 The Farmer's Barn Book appears to have been a very standard agricultural reference book, both in the U.S. and Great Britain, throughout the 1800s -- it was not just some minor, little known work -- but rather a book that was a highly regarded authority at the time, as evidenced by the fact that it was published in numerous editions both in the U.S. and Great Britain. It is still included in the libraries of many agricultural schools. In answer to the argument against oxen now under consideration, and the one which has had most influence in restricting the use of them, we now offer the views urged by the illustrious Madison (one of the early presidents of the USA) whose pen simplified and enlightened every subject it touched, as could not but happen with a mind so pure and so bright. The objections generally made to the ox are 1st, that he is less tractable than the horse; 2nd, that he does not bear heat as well; 3rd, that he does not answer for the single plough used in our corn fields; 4th, that he is slower in his movements; 5th, that he is less fit for carrying the produce of the farm to market. The first objection is certainly founded in mistake. Of the two animals the ox is the most docile. In all countries where the ox is the ordinary draught animal, his docility is proverbial. His intractability, where it exists, has arisen from an occasional use of him only, with long and irregular intervals; during which, the habit of discipline being broken, a new one is to be formed. The second objection has as little foundation. The constitution of the ox accom-odates itself as readily as that of the horse to different climates. Not only in ancient Greece and Italy, but throughout Asia, as presented to us in ancient history, the ox and the plough are associated. At this day, in the warm parts of India and China, the ox, not the horse, is in the draught service. In every part of India the ox always appears, even in the train of her armies. And in the hottest parts of the West Indies, the ox is employed in hauling the weighty produce to the seaports. The mistake here, as in the former case, has arisen from the effect of an occasional employment only, with no other than green food. The fermentation of this in the animal, heated by the weather, and fretted by the discipline, will readily account for his sinking under his exertions; when green food even, much less dry, with a sober habit of labor, would have no such tendency. The third objection also is not a solid one. The ox can, by a proper harness, be used singly, as well as the horse, between the rows of Indian corn; and equally so used for other purposes. Experience may be safely appealed to on this point. In the fourth place, it is alleged that he is slower in his movements. This is true, but in a less degree than is often taken for granted. Oxen that are well chosen for their form are not worked after the age of about eight years, (the age at which they are best fitted for beef), are not worked too many together, and are suitably matched, may be kept at nearly as quick a step as that of horses we see at work, who, on account of their age, or the leanness occasioned by the costliness of the food they require, lose the advantage where they might have once had it? The last objection has most weight. The ox is not well adapted as the horse to the road service, especially for long trips. In common roads, which are often soft, and sometimes suddenly become so the form of his foot and the shortness of his leg are disadvantages; and, on roads frozen or turnpiked, the roughness of the surface in the former case, and its hardness in both cases, are inconvenient to his cloven foot. But where the distance to market is not great, where the varying state of the roads and of the weather can be consulted, and where the road service is less in proportion to the farm service, the objection is almost deprived of its weight. In cases where it most applies, its weight is diminished by the consideration that a much greater proportion of service on the farm may be done by oxen than is now commonly done, and that the expense of shoeing them is little different from that of keeping horses shod. The next most serious charge against the ox is constitutional slowness of motion, which, as many suppose, no course of education can overcome, but which, may be set off in comparison with the greater speed of the horse, as Aesop illustrated the difference in the long run between the pace of the 'tortoise and the hare! "The greater haste the less speed," is a proverb suited to this case as to that. It has already been seen that ox-teams travel over the ever verdant pampas of Buenos Ayres, at the rate of thirty miles a day, for a month together. Twenty years ago, the writer of this held correspondence with Commodore Jacob Jones, himself a practical farmer, and an habitually close and judicious observer, and then commanding our squadron in the Mediterranean, on the subject of Andalusian horses, cattle, and other animals, with a view to the importation, under authority from the Albermarle Agriculture Society. Of such as might be deemed we now quote from his letter as applicable to the questions both of speed and susceptibility to eat: "The cattle that I have seen in Spain appear to be nothing superior to ours, nor have I seen anywhere on the coasts of the Mediterranean any that appear better than those in America, except a race of white cattle at Naples used for the draft. I was informed by a gentleman who, in supplying the government with timber, had used thirty yoke of them for two years, that during that time they had constantly traveled from twenty to twenty five miles a day. They are generally fifteen hands high; their bodies long, thin, and deep; legs long; small light head; sharp muzzle resembling deer; color entirely white, except black nose, ears, and tuft of the tail. They are most frequently worked in the thills of the cart, and are as spirited and walk as quick as a horse, and appeared not to suffer from heat more than a horse." To show, however, that we are not dependent on any foreign stock, it may be stated that the small, pale red field ox about Salisbury in Maryland will travel twenty five miles in a day, with heavy loads of lumber going, and returning empty, over the sandy roads of that region; while it may be affirmed, after particular inquiry, that the distance made by the heavy-bodied, grain-loving, Conestoga horses on the national road between Cumberland and Wheeling averages not over sixteen miles, six horses with loads of from six to eight thousand pounds. "Just at the close of the war, in the summer of 1783, I recollect being at the house of an agricultural gentleman of Princeton, in New Jersey, where Congress was then sitting, and that Charles Thomson, the Secretary, was present. One of Arthur Young's Agricultural Tours in England lay on the table, and gave rise to a conversation on the use of oxen for the draft, particularly when geared with collars, hames, and traces, like horses; and Mr. Thomson related the following fact, now, for substance, perfectly in my recollection. Traveling in that part of Chester county in Pennsylvania which lay between Lancaster in that State and Newport on Christiana creek, Mr. Thompson fell in with a team of a novel character in that country, being composed of one pair of horses and one pair of oxen: and the latter were accoutered with harness like horses, only with the collars turned upside down. His curiosity being excited, he stopped and made some inquiries, and received from the driver an account as follows: that he and a neighbor, each having a horse team and wagon, had entered into a contract to transport a quantity of flour (I think in a given time) to Newport; that in the midst of the work one or two of his horses failed, (felled sick or died), and he was not in circumstances conveniently to procure others; but he had a pair of oxen, and he concluded to try whether they would supply the place of his horses that he made the experiment and succeeded. He told Mr. Thomson that the oxen were more useful to him than horses; for after some fall rains, when the roads had become miry, he continued to carry his full complement of barrels of flour, while his neighbor's horse team frequently getting stalled, (the familiar term in Pennsylvania when a team gets set fast in a slough), compelled him to lessen his loads. But he added, that in returning from Newport with their wagons empty, his neighbor had the advantage in speed, although none in the actual performance of the contract." A writer in the Memoirs of the Massachusetts Agricultural Society, speaking to a community who neither could nor would be deceived on a matter so well understood by, and so deeply interesting to them, says - "The principal argument of the advocates for the cultivation by horses in Maryland seems to be the superior speed of the horse. With this must proceed from an imperfect training of the cattle. With us our cattle will plough an acre of ground much better, and in as short a time, as a pair of horses would do it, unless they can trot their horses in the plough, so they will get in a ton of hay in as short a time." Here we are well persuaded the sagacious writer hits the nail on the head, when he suggests that the objection on the score of speed must arise from an "imperfect training of the cattle." He must possess an imperfect knowledge of the difference between the habits of the New England and the Southern plough man who is not prepared to admit that in nothing is that difference greater than in their treatment of all their cattle, and more especially their oxen. I this very difference, in fact, is to be found the solution of the question, and this brings us to the point for making the suggestions we propose on the breed, gearing, training, and general treatment of the ox. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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