
Smith, Lord Strathcona of Winnipeg, Manitoba, and Robert Campbell of Strathclair, Manitoba, imported one bull each. Highland cattle were first imported into Canada in the 1880s. Since then, numbers have been growing and semen is being exported to New Zealand to establish the breed there. In 1988 the Australian Highland Cattle Society was formed. They were seen and survived in Port Victoria during the late 1800s, but other folds were believed to have died out in areas such as New South Wales. Samuel Amess, also from Scotland, who made a fortune in the Victorian goldfields and became Mayor of Melbourne in 1869, kept a small fold of black Highland cattle on Churchill Island. Arriving in Port Albert, Victoria, in 1841 with his clan, they apparently drove their Highland cattle to a farm at Greenmount, on the Tarra River, preceded by a piper. Highland cattle were first imported into Australia by the mid-nineteenth century by Scottish migrants such as Chieftain Aeneas Ronaldson MacDonell of Glengarry, Scotland. The total population world-wide was reported at just over 40 000, with the largest numbers in France and Finland. : 200 In 2022 the breed was reported to DAD-IS by twenty-three countries, of which seventeen reported population data. : 200 Later in the twentieth century there were exports to various European countries. Above Širvintos, in Lithuania Bull, cow and calf on Seceda in the Val Gardena, in northern Italyįrom the late nineteenth century, stock was exported to various countries of the world, among them Argentina, Australia, Canada, the Falkland Islands, the former Soviet Union and the United States. In 1954, Queen Elizabeth II ordered Highland cattle to be kept at Balmoral Castle where they are still kept today. This is because in winter, the cattle were kept in open shelters made of stone called folds to protect them from the weather at night. : 200Īlthough a group of cattle is generally called a herd, a group of Highland cattle is known as a "fold". The number of unregistered cattle is not known. : 200 In 2021 it was 3161 the conservation status of the breed in the United Kingdom is listed in DAD-IS as endangered/at risk. In 2002 the number of registered breeding cows in the United Kingdom was about 2500 by 2012 this had risen to some 6000. In this the two types were recorded without distinction as 'Highland'. : 243Ī breed society was established in 1884, and in 1885 published the first volume of the herd-book. In 1723 over 30 000 Scottish cattle were sold into England. At markets such as those of Falkirk or Crieff, many were bought by drovers from England, who moved them south over the Pennines to be fattened for slaughter. These cattle were important to the Scottish economy of the eighteenth century. The cattle of the mainland were somewhat larger, and very variable in colour they were often brown or red.

: 243 The cattle were so called because of the practice of swimming them across the narrow straits or kyles separating the islands from the mainland. The Kyloe, reared mainly in the Hebrides or Western Islands, was small and was frequently black. The Highland is a traditional breed of western Scotland. History Bull and bull calf, illustration from 1890–1900 Black cows Cow and calf in south-eastern Saskatchewan It is reared primarily for beef, and has been exported to several other countries. The first herd-book dates from 1885 two types – a smaller island type, usually black, and a larger mainland type, usually dun – were registered as a single breed. It is a hardy breed, able to withstand the intemperate conditions in the region.

It originated in the Scottish Highlands and the Western Islands of Scotland and has long horns and a long shaggy coat. The Highland ( Scottish Gaelic: Bò Ghàidhealach Scots: Hielan coo) is a Scottish breed of rustic cattle.
