Highbelt
Highbelt cattle are generally Highland crossed with Belted Galloway, combining two Scottish beef types often kept for cold-country grazing and small-farm beef. The Highland side brings long hair, horns, and a rangy hill-cattle look; the Belted Galloway adds a naturally polled background, a dense coat, and the familiar white belt around a black, dun, or red body. First-generation calves may be belted, brockle-faced, solid, horned, or polled, so the label describes ancestry more than a fixed breed standard.
People keep Highbelts for grass-fed beef, pasture management, and the eye-catching appearance valued in agritourism herds. They still need strong cattle fencing, safe alleys or chutes, and attention to heat stress where summers are humid. Breeding decisions should look past the belt and focus on calving ease, udder quality, feet, disposition, and whether polled genetics are being used responsibly. Registration options are limited or crossbred, so written parentage is more useful than a marketing name.
Colors: Belted, Black, Black and White, Blaze Faced, Blue Roan, Brindle, Brockle Faced, Brown, Brown and White, Dun, Gray, Lineback, Mottled, Red, Red and White, Red Roan, Roan, Silver, Solid Black, Solid Red, Speckled, Spotted, White, White Faced, Yellow