Mashona
Mashona cattle are an indigenous Zimbabwean beef breed associated with Shona farming areas and developed from local Sanga-type cattle. They are small to medium framed compared with many commercial beef breeds, with a smooth coat, hard feet, and a heat-shedding build suited to semi-arid rangeland. Coats vary widely, including red, dun, black, brown, gray, and broken patterns. Their value lies in fitness under low-input conditions: fertility, calving ease, good mothering, and the ability to stay productive when grazing quality falls.
In Zimbabwe and neighboring regions, Mashona are kept as suckler cows, village cattle, and seedstock for crossbreeding into larger beef herds. They do best where management protects their adaptation rather than pushing them like a high-input terminal breed. Sound mineral nutrition, controlled breeding seasons, and culling for functional udders, feet, and temperament help maintain herd quality. Buyers should look for cattle raised in environments similar to their own, because the breed's strengths are most visible on veld grazing, in heat, and during seasonal feed shortages.
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