Maraîchine
The Maraîchine is a French cattle breed of the wet meadows and marshes around the Marais Poitevin, Vendée and Charente-Maritime. It belongs to the old western French cattle tradition that supplied draft power, calves and milk for small farms, and it is closely associated with lowland grazing rather than intensive dairy production. Animals are generally large-framed and fawn, wheaten or grayish-fawn, with a dark muzzle and eyelids and long horns that frame a plain, workmanlike head. The breed declined sharply in the twentieth century but survived through local conservation efforts.
Modern Maraîchine herds are often managed as suckler cattle on permanent pasture, including damp meadows where grazing helps keep open habitats from turning into scrub. They are valued for hardiness, mothering ability and use of coarse forage, not for the fastest finishing weights. Handling systems need to account for horns and the size of mature cows, and winter feed planning is still necessary in wet years when pasture is damaged. For breeders and conservation graziers, choosing registered or well-documented animals helps maintain a population that is still small compared with mainstream French beef breeds.
Colors: Belted, Black, Black and White, Blaze Faced, Blue Roan, Brindle, Brockle Faced, Brown, Brown and White, Dun, Gray, Grey, Highbelt, Highpark, Lineback, Mottled, Pied, Red, Red and White, Red Roan, Riggit, Roan, Silver, Solid Black, Solid Red, Solid White, Speckled, Spotted, White, White Faced, Yellow