The Kerry is a small-sized, fine-boned dairy
breed, mostly black in color. Cows weigh between 780-1000 pounds
and are horned.
Milk production averages 7000-8000 pounds,
but can occasionally exceed 10,000 pounds, with over 4% butterfat.
Kerrys are hardy and long-lived, often still calving at 14-15 years
of age.
By 1983 the world population of pedigreed
Kerrys had dropped to around 200. The Irish Department of Agriculture
has since taken steps to support the maintenance of the breed and
numbers are again creeping upwards.
Status:
RARE. Kerrys are globally rare, and thus
the few herds in Canada are of great importance.
Reference:
American Livestock Breeds Notebook. The
American Livestock Breeds Conservancy, Pittsboro, NC 1989.
Photographs:
Stephanie Diamant, taken at Plimoth Plantation,
Plymouth, MA, Rare Breeds Program