Galloway bullock wins prestigious Queen Cup

Shows & Sales
Report

Galloway bullock wins prestigious Queen Cup and reserve pure breed champion at “Smithfield” which was hosted by the East of England Agricultural Society at their Winter Stock Festival.

Supermario an April 2009 born John Joe of Kilnstown son was exhibited by Mr & Mrs MJ Alford, Fox Hill Farm, Collumpton, Devon.  This Kilnstown Farm Ltd, Bewcastle, Carlisle bred calf was successfully shown at the recent Agri Expo at Carlisle and it will be travelling north to Scottish Winter Fair next week

 

Galloway Cattle Society Autumn Show and Sale held on Friday 22nd October at Wallets’ Mart, Castle Douglas

Shows & Sales
Report

At the Society pre sale show, Andrew McConchie, Mains of Penninghame, Newton Stewart received both Champion and reserve for his much talked about heifers.   Mr Gordon Kyle, Spout Bank, Walton, Brampton awarded the champion to lots 16 Penninghame Quiver and Lot 18, Penninghame Quebec, these September 2008 born Blackcraig Lucrative daughters were sold to 750gns to Mrs Craig, Ayr  and 800gns to well known Galloway breeder RA McClymont and Son, Kirkstead, Yarrow, respectively.

 

The reserve champion pair, lots 19 and 20, once again Blackcraig Lucrative daughters, Penninghame Quota an October 2008 born stylish heifer was purchased by Mrs Craig, Ayr for 800gns and Penninghame Quirk, which was the days top price of 2000gns was sold to RA McClymont and Son, Kirkstead, Yarrow.

Top price bull was exhibited by Messrs Gilligan, High Creoch, Gatehouse of Fleet, Intrepid of High Creoch an May 2008 born Septimus of Tweedshaw son sold to Mr R Fergusson, Nether Rusko, Dalry, Castle Douglas for 2000gns.

Averages

2 bulls £1496
2 heifers with calves at foot £741
2 incalf heifers £756
12 bulling heifers £776
4 cows £742

Click here for full prices

Show was kindly sponsored by MacMin Ltd.

All the latest news from sale entry forms to the newest Border Fine Arts Figurine - UPDATED: Carlisle Sale

Shows & Sales
Announcement

November Sale at Carlisle - November 5th, 2010

Autumn Sale of Pedigree Galloways, entries now being accepted for Males and Females,  entries close 1st October, 2010 see the Harrison and Hetherington web page www.livestock-sales.co.uk for information and entry forms.

Castle Douglas Sale catalogues now available - October 22nd, 2010

Autumn Sale of Pedigree Galloways, 44 Pedigree Galloway cattle forward for sale on 22nd October, click here for catalogue or contact the office.

Border Fine Art Galloway cow and calf figurine

Available from 2011, please contact the office if you would like to reserve one.  

 

New Member, Jamie Halbert explains why Galloways are ideal for his enterprise

General News

Farming is in the blood for Jamie Halbert and he chose the unusual and difficult route as a new starter in agriculture.

Now, at 29, running his own farming enterprise single-handedly near Hadrian’s Wall, he has found the Galloway cow to be ideal for ease of management and suiting the system on disadvantaged land which has high importance for access, history and the environment.

Jamie bought 105 acres in a ring-fence at Chapel House, Gilsland in November 2005 Further opportunities came along with the purchase of another 108 acres on Hadrian’s Wall and then the rental of 100 acres of hill land and he is now running 350 acres in total.

Initially, he set up a herd of three quarter Limousin-British Blue suckler cows, crossing them all with the Limousin bull and selling the May-born calves the following March.

“Last year’s batch of calves averaged £700 but there could be as much as £500 associated with producing each calf in terms of feeding, silage fertiliser, without considering the capital outlay, and it wasn’t paying,” said Jamie.

“I decided to look for a system that suited me. Because I’m running such a small enterprise I don’t have the economies of scale.

“I couldn’t afford to build a muck store or cubicle building to cut down on my straw bills so I looked at building a sustainable system in which I could go forwards, not backwards. And that’s where the Galloways fit in,” he added.

Although accepted for an accountancy degree course at Newcastle University, instead of A levels he did a foundation degree course in agriculture at Harper Adams University College in Shropshire followed by a specialist sheep course at Kirkley Hall in Northumberland

He also worked part time at Gapshield, Gilsland for Willie and Christine Wallace where he had worked since he was 15. This was followed by an HND in agriculture at Bishop Burton College.

Keen to go into upland farming, he took a job on a hill far in north Northumberland, followed by working with pedigree Suffolks in Wiltshire. He returned to the north to work for Graham Dixon at Alwinton where he leanrned a lot, including how to train sheep dogs, and he worked there for three years until the opportunity came to buy Chapel House Farm at Gilsland.

“I wanted to rent somewhere that was bigger but my mum, Sally, whose family had been in farming, suggested that I bought a small farm and with the help of my dad Robin I started with 105 acres,” said Jamie.

This land comprises 45 acres of in-bye and 60 acres of what Jamie describes as ‘bog’. At Chapel House, the line of Hadrian’s wall runs under the cow shed and the house is built on a military track.

The farm is currently in Entry Level Stewardship and because of the importance of access in the area with several footpaths including the Hadrian’s Wall path crossing the land, Jamie is hopeful to join Higher Level Stewardship in 2010.

Even with a further 115 acres in ELS near Hadrian’s wall subsequently purchased with the help of his father and uncle Doug and 100 acres of rented rough hill land qualifiying for HLS on the Wall next to Kielder Forest, Jamie still has to supplement his income with fencing and contracting jobs as well as breeding and training collie dogs.

“That’s why the Galloways suit my system because I’m doing a lot of other work. With the Limousins I was up calving cows in the middle of the night, I was under pressure for winter housing and I was struggling to produce enough silage,” said Jamie.

“After a visit to Kirkstead, Yarrow, I decided it might be more sense to have a native breed and then I was surprised at how Galloways would do. I had sold the Limousins within a couple of weeks by February 2009, just in time for the early Galloway sales.

“I was very impressed with the Galloways I saw in Scotland both privately and at the Castle Douglas sale. I bought seven heifers, five bulling and two in-calf, privately from Stuart McIntosh at Outer Huntly which were very healthy animals.

“I purchased a further five in-calf heifers from Alan McClymont, Kirkstead, Yarrow, which all produced live calves and three bulling heifers at the Castle Douglas sale, paying 2,000gns for one from Barlaes, as well as a stock cow and two heifer stirks from the Todstone dispersal,” said Jamie.

The herd now numbers 21 cows which are run with a bull bought with Hunter Smith of Wylie Syke from Ian Thompson and David Preacher at Holly Lea.

The sale of the Limousin sucklers has enabled Jamie to establish the Milestone Galloway herd as well as renovate the farm house and allow him to move out of his accommodation in a caravan at the farm.

Optimum herd numbers for the land currently farmed will be 30 cows run alongside 320 ewes plus ewe hoggs, 220 of which are Hexham type Blackfaces, all but 20 of which put to the Bluefaced Leicester, are bred pure.

Of the remainder, 60 are Mules with 40 pure Texels. A Beltex ram was used for the first time in 2009.

Any surplus Galloway females will be sold as bulling heifers or be finished with steers at 26 to 28 months old, aimed at the specialist butcher.

At Chapel House there is housing for up to 40 youngstock. The cows are being outwintered with a maximum of 16 on the HLS hill land which runs up to 1,000ft above sea level.

“The Galloways have helped me to secure the rented land for which the owner receives the HLS payment,” said Jamie. “I couldn’t have sent the Limousin cows there and they would not have been suitable for the scheme. With the Galloways being a medium-sized cow they don’t damage the ground. They also have a very even grazing pattern grazing off rush and poor hill grass which goes hand in hand with the sheep.

“I am expecting that the Galloways will also help me in my application for HLS.

“Management of the Galloways is minimal. While I still give them a mineral bolus and treat them for fluke and worms once a year, my reliance on conserved forage has been massively reduced.

“In 2008 we housed the cattle in October and if we hadn’t sold them early the next year it would have meant seven to eight months of winter housing and the cost of straw and probably extra silage. Now 75 per cent of my herd is not housed at all and will only be fed some silage as the winter worsens after Christmas. I feed a small amount of cake to enable me to check and move the stock on my own but they are very placid.

“”In 2009 I used no nitrogen fertilise and, if possible, I won’t be using it again, only P and K.

The plan is to establish a principally spring calving herd with calves taken off their mothers in the New Year and grazed and wintered at Chapel House for two years.

With the ewes starting to lamb with the Texels from February 20, Jamie times a break so that he can supplement his income doing another lambing for a neighbour before starting again with the Blackfaces and Mules from April 16 outside.

All the Texel lambs not retained as breeding rams are finished along with half the Blackies. A small number of ewe lambs are also sold for breeding.

Last year 11 Texel shearling tups sold at Hexham in mid-September averaged £560. The intention is to sell a pen of Blackface tups at Hexham each October.

The Royal Highland Show 2009

General News

At the 2009 Royal Highland show, the Galloways won all the major trophies including the individual, native interbreed, interbreed and pairs competitions.  Never has one breed dominated all the cattle championships at Scotland’s premiere show.

The star of the show was Blackcraig Kodiac exhibited by Willie MacLean, Inverglen, Barcaldine, Oban,   This six year old bull along with Doon of Urr Nerys 42nd from Jim and Selina Ross, Romesbeoch, Shawhead and Blackcraig Noreen from John and Ann Finlay, Blackcraig  won the native team of three.

Later on in the week, they were joined by John and Ann’s other heifer Blackcraig Diana 0222, to make up a team of four and secure the prestigious interbreed trophy.  Judge Peter Donger, from the Charolais and Saler Seawell herd, described them as a ‘tremendous well-balanced team’.

Earlier in the day Peter Donger had no hesitation in placing Kodiac best overall in the individual award. “He is the best Galloway I have ever seen” he said. On the last day of the show and to top a fanastic week, Blackcraig Kodiac and Doon of Urr Nerys 42nd won the Pairs Competition, this competition has only been running two years and the Galloway have won it both years.

This is the first time since 1974 and the introduction of the continental breeds that the Galloways have won the individual award and to come out top over the 12 other cattle breeds and 1051 beef entries was a fantastic achievement for a minority breed.