bangtail muster
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From bangtail (“to dock the tail brush”) + muster (“a roundup”).
Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
[edit]bangtail muster (plural bangtail musters)
- (Australia) A muster of cattle, for counting and any of various other purposes, during which any animals not previously counted are bangtailed, treated and released.
- 1926, Parliament of Australia, Parliamentary Debates[1], volume 113, page 2099:
- There has since been a bangtail muster and already 1,400 cattle are in hand.
- 1965, Australian Veterinary Association, Australian Veterinary Journal[2], volume 41, page 352:
- Investigation shows that during the period studied, five properties made no accurate count of breeders (bangtail muster), while two made one count.
- 1973, Hector Holthouse, S'pose I Die: The story of Evelyn Maunsell[3], page 123:
- A bangtail muster was a count of every beast on a property, and every one of them had to be yarded and have its tail cropped to show it had been counted.
- 2010, Michael Pearson, Jane Lennon, Pastoral Australia: Fortunes, Failures & Hard Yakka: A Historical Overview 1788-1967, page 169:
- There was, for example, a rapid build-up of Ord River station cattle numbers depastured on the river flats, from 400 in 1885 to 30,000 in 1896 and 47,000 at the bangtail muster in 1901-02.