0818 Luing Journal.indd
Transcription
0818 Luing Journal.indd
Upper Chatto Heifers sold at Stirling & Castle Douglas. Hardy hill-bred Stock 2nd year member of the Premium Cattle Health Scheme. Closed herd. Hon R B Loder Children’s Settlement, Upper Chatto, Hownam, Kelso, TD5 8AN Telephone Stephen Little: 01573 440235 Consultancy Services Consultancy Services Consultancy Services Consultancy Services Disease Control Consultancy Services & Eradication for Consultancy Services t Johne’s t Services BVD Consultancy Consultancy Services t IBR t Leptospirosis Consultancy Services SAC CHeCS licensed / all tests ISO 17025 accredited t Remove costly disease from your herd t Provide health assurance for your customers t Safeguard the health status of your herd Contact: SAC Veterinary Services Greycrook, St Boswells, Roxburghshire, TD6 0EU T: 01835 822456 E: vcstboswells@sac.co.uk www.sac.ac.uk/cattlehealth THE LUING JOURNAL – JANUARY 2011 www.luingcattlesociety.co.uk 23 Merkland Luings We will have a good selection of Bulling Heifers at Castle Douglas Sale in February 2011 VISITORS AND ENQUIRIES WELCOME J. Fawcett & Co MERKLAND, THORNHILL, DUMFRIESSHIRE DG3 4AR Tel: (01848) 600207 24 e: secretary@luingcattlesociety.co.uk t: 01250-873882 THE LUING JOURNAL – JANUARY 2011 DRINKSTONE Drinkstone — breeding Luings, and Sim-Luings — also Suffolks, Texels and Bluefaced Leicesters Aiming at the top commercial market JOHNES ACCREDITED BVD TESTING Drinkstone Edmonton ARNOLD and JOHN PARK DRINKSTONE, HAWICK, ROXBURGHSHIRE TD9 7NY TEL: 01450 370795 MOBILE: 07860 389773 Email: j_park@btconnect.com www.drinkstone.com THIRD ANNUAL SALE OF PEDIGREE & COMMERCIAL LUING CATTLE ON WEDNESDAY 18TH MAY 2011 --------------------------------Following the tremendous success of our first two sales we look forward to continuing and expanding this prestigious event. Also annual sale of Hi-Health cattle including Sim./Luing & SH x bulling heifers and annual sale of Highland cattle --------------------------------Weekly sales of prime and store stock held throughout the year. Special sales of store lambs, weaned calves, store and breeding cattle and sheep held throughout the Autumn as per our sales booklet (available on request). Ample lairage available before and after sales. Satellite markets at Lochmaddy(Isle of North Uist), Portree (Isle of Skye), Fort William and Stornoway (Isle of Lewis). Dingwall & Highland Marts Limited Tel. 01349 863252 Fax. 01349 865062 www.dingwallmart.co.uk THE LUING JOURNAL – JANUARY 2011 www.luingcattlesociety.co.uk 25 Born and reared on the hills of Peeblesshire BVD and Johnes Accredited and a member of Hi-Health Bulling Heifers for sale at Castle Douglas Sim-Luing Bulling Heifers for sale at Stirling 26 e: secretary@luingcattlesociety.co.uk t: 01250-873882 D & A Barr MilkiestonFarm Peebles Tel: 01721 730213 THE LUING JOURNAL – JANUARY 2011 Photo courtesy of The Scottish Farmer MilkiestonLuings Luing influence on Monitor Farms Luing bulls are having quite an impact on the renowned Scottish Monitor Farms Programme (MFP) run by Quality Meat Scotland. The rolling programme, which has recently appointed the 25th Monitor Farm, has had three farms running Luing bulls – Balanloan (part of Atholl Estates, Perthshire), Plan Farm (Isle of Bute) and Acrestrype (Turriff). An excellent website (www.qmscotland.co.uk and follow the links to Farming & Processing > Monitor Farms Programme) is regularly updated with articles and reports from the MFP so it might be worth adding to your favourites list if you want to read up on some interesting studies involving Luings. A Scottish Government study carried out by ADAS in 2008 calculated the benefit of the MFP to the Scottish Economy at £6.50 for every £1 of funding, backed up by their use as a vehicle for Knowledge Transfer and the widespread awareness (c.80%) of their purpose by the farming community. Out of small acorns……... Ever wondered why someone is in Luings? John Kitchen of the Lowerisle herd in West Yorkshire puts it down to a previous holiday on the West coast of Scotland. He was staying in a cottage on the Arisaig Estate (home to current Society Director James Colston’s Arisaig herd) and found himself “walking amongst these wonderful quiet red and roan cows……….I decided then to seek out some Luings in Yorkshire and get into them.” THE LUING JOURNAL – JANUARY 2011 Fiona Wilson (third from right) with some of her fellow runners. Fiona Wilson’s Charity run Fiona Wilson would like to thank her many Luing Friends, who sponsored her to run the Chris Hoy Half Marathon in Edinburgh on Sunday 18th April. “I am very pleased to report that I did indeed manage to finish the 13.1 mile course, albeit in 3 hours 7 mins, just outside my target, but I’m thrilled to have completed it, as I’ve done no serious running (other than running around after Jim and the kids) since leaving school 41 years ago. I have to say it was more difficult than I imagined but the sponsorship I’ve managed to raise - to date £3100 - was a great incentive and kept me going. Many thanks to all of you who contributed, and in case any of you are daft enough to feel like doing likewise, I have spaces available for the same race for the next two years for The Gail Wilson Trust. Look forward to seeing you all again soon, Love and Thanks again, Fiona xx” Late night unloading Proof, as if it were needed, of the quiet nature of Luings comes from Pip Simpson – a relatively new member from Poole Bank Farm, Troutbeck, in Cumbria. Picture the scene……..11pm on 1st December 2009 and a double-decker wagon has just backed up to the bottom of the village road of Troutbeck (realising that he can’t get any closer to Poole Bank) containing Pip’s starter pack of 30 cows and a bull from Cadzow Bros.) Its pitch black and blizzard conditions. Man power amounts to Pip, his father, brother and eldest son – they drop the door and brace themselves for a rodeo. The cows amble down the ramp, wait at the bottom until the bull is off, then proceed to saunter up the road turning up the farm drive and into the straw bedded pen to lie down (first time they’d ever been under cover remember). Pip commented, “We couldn’t believe it, it’s as if they’d be born here. If they’d been (breed name deleted upon legal advice) we’d still be looking for ‘em.” www.luingcattlesociety.co.uk 27 Royal Highland Show by Johnny C. Mackey Breed Secretary Location, location, location is what the Highland Show was all about this year. We were in the usual area of the showground, however (unfortunately for them) our friends in the Bazadaise Society were not attending, and as a result our pitch had been shunted one space to the south and right up against the main cattle show ring. Combined with the fantastic weather on the Saturday in particular, it meant that we could open up the side of the marquee next to the show ring and have a great view up close and personal of the judging. Whilst it was great for us, perhaps not so much for the judges who were subjected to lots of useful comments such as ‘why don’t you pop in here for at look at some real cattle’ any time they made the mistake of hanging around in ‘our corner’. All of a sudden, the Luing Society gained a lot of friends we never knew we had as several farmers visited our stand with a view to easing themselves over to the side for a brief lean on the barrier to watch some judging. It may have only been my second show with the Society but it was definitely a lot busier on the stand than last year. I know this as despite buying up the same amount of catering supplies in advance, by Saturday morning milk and biscuits had run low so clearly we were looking after a lot more members and friends this year which was great to see. Apart from our free viewing gallery of the show ring and reputation as a good stop-off for a brew, there was obviously something else pulling people onto the stand and that credit must go to the excellent stock on display. Two of the Attonburn bulling heifers that had made their exhibiting debut at Beef Expo the previous month in Hexham were there together with the College Sim-Luing cow and Limousin calf from the same event. We are once again very grateful to Charles & Mary Symons and Ted & Anne Fox for taking the time to bring out such good stock for our biggest event of the year in terms of visitor numbers. Unfortunately I could not get a good enough picture of our stand to show you the view of the show ring so you will have to come along next year and see it first hand for yourself. Ballyoan Luing heifer offered as prize in raffle draw by Johnny C. Mackey Breed Secretary Members may recall coverage on the website and in the summer newsletter about Drew Peoples of Ballyoan Luings, Co. Londonderry, Northern Ireland, running a raffle to win a pedigree Luing heifer. The raffle was to raise funds for Friends of the Cancer Centre, a charity based in Northern Ireland whose good work Drew witnessed first hand when being successfully treated for prostate cancer in Belfast early in 2010. Friends of the Cancer Centre (www.friendsofthecancercentre.com), known as ‘Friends’, is the leading local cancer charity based at the heart of the Cancer Centre, in Belfast City Hospital – a world leading centre for cancer treatment. The charity relies entirely on voluntary donations and with help and support ‘Friends’ makes a real and mean- ingful difference for thousands of cancer patients and their families across Northern Ireland. Drew’s raffle was generously supported by friends and family in Northern Ireland as well as several Luing members from the Isle of Barra all the way to Lancaster. Readers may remember Drew stationed at the West Preston open day where he managed to raise a lot of money from tickets sold that day. The draw took place in the offices of Friends on Thursday 28th October, and raised a fantastic £3,400 for the hospital charity. Staff of Chefs Mate in Campsie Real Estate, Londonderry, won the top prize but have opted for a cash alternative of £1,000. Drew was delighted with the total raised having experienced such professionalism at the Cancer Centre himself and was keen to give something back. 28 e: secretary@luingcattlesociety.co.uk t: 01250-873882 Drew extends his thanks to everyone who supported him and described the amount raised as “truly heart warming”. ‘Pictured at the draw, l-r: Drew Peoples, Colleen Shaw (Fundraising Manager), Darren Mitchell (Consultant, Clinical Oncology). THE LUING JOURNAL – JANUARY 2011 Photo courtesy of Judy McGowan Royal Ulster Show 2010 The two heifers destined for the Royal Ulster Show from the Laganview herd. by Johnny C. Mackey Breed Secretary “D’you have any sucklers yourself?” If I heard this once, I heard it a dozen times whilst attending the 2010 Royal Ulster Show at Balmoral in mid-May. These words were regularly uttered by Robin Wells of Laganview Luings, Magheralin, Co. Armagh and were clearly his ‘opener’ when approaching a farmer who had stopped by the Luing stand at the show. Much the same as a salesman will have a line that they will use to start a conversation with a potential customer, a line that will put both parties at ease and hopefully result in a long and fruitful conversation with a transaction at the conclusion. Robin Wells is an absolute master of this technique and managed to have several such conversations with the large numbers of visitors to the Luing stand. It was of course a bit more straight forward for Robin as the cattle on the stand were his own so of THE LUING JOURNAL – JANUARY 2011 course he knew them well and was able to pass on plenty of useful information. The Society was also represented through Steven & Elaine Murray, Andrew & Lorna McNee, myself and ably supported by local members, including director James Newell. We had a very busy few days at the show with a noticeable shift in the emphasis of the enquiries from the background to the breed (last year) to this year much more interest in actually buying Luing or Sim-Luing cattle. Whilst the trade has been strong throughout 2010 at the Society sales, that can bring a slight downside in so much as bulling heifers at c£1,350 can appear out of reach to Northern Irish suckler farmers by the time blood testing and transport costs are considered as well as their home-market trade which is usually back on the mainland trade. In saying all that, when you have cattle of the calibre that the Society had kindly supplied by Robin Wells - a pedigree Luing bulling heifer and a registered Sim-Luing (both averaging 485kg at 14 months, see picture) – they do most of the work for you. With such quality cattle being bred in Northern Ireland, hopefully in the not too distant future local breeders will have enough excess females to satisfy the high demand for Luing-bred stock. Radio Ulster Working on the theme that publicity, no matter what the context, is always positive I exploited some family contacts and got myself a quick interview slot on the Gerry Anderson show on Radio Ulster during the show. Gerry and his team, who produce one of the most popular radio shows broadcast in the province with almost 100,000 listeners daily, attend the show every year and wander about with a microphone interviewing random people about their experiences at the event. Queue lots of basic questions about where Luings come from etc. and hopefully now a few more people in Northern Ireland will have heard about the breed. www.luingcattlesociety.co.uk 29 C B W O Z AD A New IBR + EBL + BVD Accredited Herd Ardlarach, Isle of Luing, By Oban, Argyll PA34 4TZ 30 e: secretary@luingcattlesociety.co.uk t: 01250-873882 THE LUING JOURNAL – JANUARY 2011 BROTHER S n w a D w Shane Cadzow 01852 314234 Email: cadzow@luing.net Manager Leslie Robson 01852 314210 THE LUING JOURNAL – JANUARY 2011 www.luingcattlesociety.co.uk 31 THETHE BUCKHOLM HERD BUCKHOLM HERD Fine Luing cattle managed by Scott Girvan but now owned by Torwoodlee & Buckholm Estates. We maintain the drive for quality pursued by the Girvan Family which has created the richly deserved reputation of the herd. Buckholm Farm Torwoodlee Galashiels TD1 2ND Scott Girvan: 07818 404367 buckholm@torwoodlee.com Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose……… 32 e: secretary@luingcattlesociety.co.uk t: 01250-873882 THE LUING JOURNAL – JANUARY 2011 Mobile Cattle Crushes Portequip Ltd. Penninghame Girvan Road, Newton Stewart, DG8 6RD Mobile Lamb Creeps Tel: +44 (0) 1671402775 Fax: +44 (0) 1671403791 Mobile - 07712595362 www.portequip.co.uk Static Feeders Static Bulk Bulk Feeders Mobile Hogg Feeders Take the work out of feeding and handling stock with the range of Portequip products Tombestone Trailers Rockcliffe Luings Mobile Bulk Feeders Static Cattle Crushes Steven & Elaine Murray West Preston Farm Kirkbean Dumfries DG2 8AU Tel: 01387 880630 Cows walking to Summer Grazing on RSPB Nature Reserve. Wintered on kale along the Solway. Benhar Boxer THE LUING JOURNAL – JANUARY 2011 Dirnanean Ensign Harehead Hickory www.luingcattlesociety.co.uk 33 College Luings graze the slopes of the Cheviot hills in Northumberland, between 900 and 2500ft. We only breed pure from the best functional females that breed on time every year. e l l g o e C n i g u s L College will have two bulls by Benhar General (pictured) entered for the Premier Sale in February at CD. Also Sim-Luing bulling heifers and in-calf heifers for sale privately Ted and Anne Fox, Elsdonburn, Kirknewton, Wooler, Northumberland NE71 6XW. Tel: 01668 216341 34 e: secretary@luingcattlesociety.co.uk t: 01250-873882 THE LUING JOURNAL – JANUARY 2011 Omega Pedigree Bull Range BULL GROWER SWEET MASH TOPLINE www.galloway-macleod.co.uk Customer Focused. Results Driven Stonehouse, Lanarkshire, ML9 3EH. Tel. 01698 791919 Monzie Luings IBR, BVD & JOHNES ACC. Full Organic Status All cows out-wintered THE LUING JOURNAL – JANUARY 2011 J J + R Cameron Monzie Farm Blair Atholl Perthshire 07786 381396 For Sale Bulling Heifers Young Bulls www.luingcattlesociety.co.uk 35 d a F e a h r e m r a s H Christmas Day 2009 What a difference 6 months makes! Luings, Sim-Luings, Blackface, Bluefaced Leicesters and Texels born and bred on top of the Lammermuirs. Professor W. A. Penny CBE Harehead, Cranshaws, Duns. Contact: Neil Anderson, Farm Manager Tel: 01361 890342 Mobile: 07747 032545 Why not come along and see for yourself? 36 e: secretary@luingcattlesociety.co.uk t: 01250-873882 THE LUING JOURNAL – JANUARY 2011 Canadian Luing Cattle Association Report by Iain Aitken 223U rearing her last calf at 23yo. End of an Era Fall 2009 heralded the end of an era in our Luing herd as we shipped the last of our “granny cows”. Back in 2001 Dr Church allowed me the pick of the Lochend mature cows to form the nucleus of my new herd. I selected four good looking cows that demonstrated the characteristics I was looking for and was surprised when we got the pedigrees transferred to discover that two were 14 and two 15 years old! With no preferential treatment these four old cows went on to rear twenty three natural calves between them as well as another six by embryo transfer out of my favorite “223U”. Two of the cows were sold for failing to get pregnant at 16 and 22 years old respectively. The other two were sold for finally turning in substandard calves at 21 and 23 years old respectively. Looking back over the years to various groups of THE LUING JOURNAL – JANUARY 2011 much younger dispersal cows I’ve bought I doubt if any of them have given me as many calves on average as these old cows did. I think this is a remarkable testament to the Canadian Luings inherent longevity and fertility. I’ll miss my granny cows but hopefully I will be able to perpetuate their characteristics through the offspring they have left us. ••• As I write this in mid September, 2010 is proving to be another year of weather extremes on the Prairies. Most of Alberta was record dry last year but most has bounced back with at least average precipitation this year. Eastern Saskatchewan and Manitoba have been excessively wet with an estimated 12 million acres of grain land un-seeded this spring. Unfortunately the situation has got worse with many crops drowned out, deteriorating quality and little prospect of some being harvested due to waterlogged soils. In my area of Alberta the crops are still very immature and a predicted killing frost this week will cause further problems. It strengthens my belief that this area should be growing grass not grain. The extra moisture has produced plenty grass but it has been so cool the grass is still lush and of lower feed value than normal. Feeder cattle markets are just starting to turn the corner from the dreadful prices of the last two years. It remains to be seen if that is a result of the lowest cattle numbers across North America for decades or over eager feedlots banking on fat cattle prices rising. Prospects for cow/calf producers are looking better but the national herd reduction continues. The margins have just been too small for too long and many producers are still choosing to exit the cow business. On the Luing front things are moving ahead slowly but steadily. Members sold bulls from British Columbia right through to Manitoba, a number of them to new customers including one who grew up near Dumfries! It’s pleasing to see 300 cow commercial herds being bred to Luing bulls – surely proof that we have the fundamentals right and are producing cattle that can compete commercially with the more popular breeds. It’s pleasing also that we have achieved this by sticking to a true Luing type whereas many other breeds have achieved popularity by changing their cattle to mirror the fashion of the day. www.luingcattlesociety.co.uk 37 Face to Face with Charlie Bell by Claire Powell Few people have been associated with the Luing breed as long as Luing Cattle Society Honorary Life Member, Charlie Bell. Now happily living the retired life of a grand father and expert dahlia grower, while enjoying the scrumptious fare of supercook wife Anne, in the Highland Perthshire village of Blair Atholl, Charlie’s involvement with Luing cattle began before this young breed was officially recognised by Act of Parliament in 1966. Born in 1939 in East Lothian, the son and grandson of two hard working farming men – William and John, who between them worked a total of 90 years on the same East Linton farm, Charlie’s early childhood memories include coming home from school and helping to chop turnips for the housed cattle before going in for his own meal. In these days the beef industry was monopolised by native British breeds, the Continental cattle breeds had not yet crossed the English Channel. “There were two breeding herds on the farm at the time” explained Charlie – “a nucleus herd of 40 Highlanders, some of which were crossed with a Shorthorn bull to maintain a herd of 40 cross-bred cows which went to an AberdeenAngus terminal sire”. Another of Charlie’s vivid childhood memories was his first day at the local primary school. Aged just five years old, his mischievous eyes fell on another five year old who was also starting her schooling – a very pretty little girl called Anne. Fourteen years later, aged 19, Charlie and Anne were wed and have produced four, now grown up children – three daughters and a son, who Anne & Charlie at their home in Blair Atholl. in turn have supplied a clutch of grandchildren. After leaving school Charlie worked as an agricultural engineer, stockman, tractor and caterpillar driver, until in 1963, aged 27, he was interviewed for the job of Farm Manager at Duncrahill in East Lothian. The interviewer was the late Denis Cadzow, one of the three Cadzow brothers who developed the Luing breed on the small Isle of Luing, a few watery yards off Scotland’s mainland west coast. “Fortunately I got the job”, said Charlie. “To work with and for Denis Cadzow was really exhilarating – the man had visions way beyond the times”. In 1947, Denis Cadzow, along with brothers Shane (also deceased) and Ralph, the current Luing Society President, had laid the foundations to the Luing breed, using a blend of Highland and Beef Shorthorn blood, on their tiny 3,813 acre island, with the basic aim of 38 e: secretary@luingcattlesociety.co.uk t: 01250-873882 economically producing reliably productive cattle for their finishing units in East Lothian (at the time Denis Cadzow was finishing up to 800 head per annum). Selection for their nucleus breeding herd on Luing was not based on show ring rosettes nor bulbous bums, but on fertility, efficiency, functionality, ease of management, in particular calving, longevity and above all – the ability to annually produce a top quality calf while living outside year round, on a diet of little more than grass. “This was my first experience of working with Luings”, said Charlie. “And I was amazed at how much weight the steers put on in their second summer at grass. Almost all of them finished by October at between 450 to 500 kgs liveweight. All the pure bull calves from Luing came to Duncrahill in the autumn, to be halter trained and assessed by Denis Cadzow. THE LUING JOURNAL – JANUARY 2011