Basco-Béarnaise Explained

Basco-Béarnaise
Use:milk

The Basco-Béarnaise or Vasca Carranzana is a breed of domestic sheep originating in the Basque country. It was developed from Basque and Béarnaise sheep during the 1960s to be a single-purpose milk breed.[1]

Origins

It derives from a family of sheep breeds from the Pyrénées with falling wool. It arose in the Béarnaise part of the Pyrénées. It has long been flocked across the Girondine plain to the Pyrénéan mountain pastures.

Morphology

Its wool is long, white and hanging. Its horns form a spiral around the ear. Its head and hooves are coloured reddish-yellow.

Rams are horned and the ewes may be either horned or polled (hornless).[1] Both sexes display white and are unicolored.[2]

The mature rams weigh 80kg (180lb) and grow to 90cm (40inches) at the withers on average. Ewes grow to 75cm (30inches) at the withers and weigh 55kg (121lb).[2]

Aptitude

It is a dairy breed, which issued from the AOC Ossau-Iraty, derived from the ewes of the Pyrénées. A ewe of this breed produces 120 litres over 130 days of lactation, producing a milk rich in matière grasse (7,42%) and in proteins (5,39%).

It is a rural breed, which lambs in spring and produces milk in the summer, passing on the richness of the Pyrénéan flora through its milk.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Basco-Béarnais . Breeds of Livestock . Oklahoma State University, Dept. of Animal Science . 2009-05-15 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080907225602/http://www.ansi.okstate.edu/breeds/sheep/basco-bearnais/index.htm . 2008-09-07 .
  2. Web site: Béarnais/France. Breed data sheet. Domestic Animal Diversity Information System. 2009-05-15.