SIMMENTALS TOPPING COMMERCIAL SALES

SIMMENTALS TOPPING COMMERCIAL SALES

AT SEDGEMOOR, RUGBY, MARKET DRAYTON, FROME, PRESTON, STIRLING, DINGWALL, & ABERDEEN. In our second market briefs report in the week, Simmental cattle continue to perform well up and down the length of the UK’s commercial markets. We kick off this week at Aberdeen and Northern Marts sale of 360 store cattle, young bulls and young and weaned calves held on 25th June. Bullocks between 301-350kg were led by a Sim from Cairntack Farm at £890, and bulls between 501- 550kg were topped by a Sim from Stratheast, Holm at £1,140, and 220.1p.  On the same day, at a sale of adult breeding cattle, heifers with bull calves averaged £2,088.46 and sold to £2,450 for a Simmental cross from Concraig, Caskieben. Heifers with heifer calves at foot averaged £1,870.53 and sold to £2,350 for a Simmental cross from Mains of Drumdollo, Drumblade and for a Simmental cross from Backmuir, Keith. In calf cows averaged £1,201.75 and sold to £1,380 for a Simmental cross from Auchtertyre Farms. Bulls sold to 2,350gns for a Simmental from Pittenkerrie.

On the previous day, 24th June, Aberdeen and Northern Marts sold 171 cows and bulls to average £1,147.31 and Simmentals again featured strongly.  Beef Feeding Cows averaged £1,001.37 (+£4.81) and sold to £1,215 for a 772kg Simmental from Ardhuncart, Kildrummy. Boning Cows averaged £739.58 (+£78.22) and sold to £915 for a 658kg Simmental from Howan, Dounby. Bulls averaged £1,360.77 (-£75.90) and sold to £1,630 for a 1,120 kg Simmental from Peasiehill, Arbirlot.

SIMMENTAL SETS RECORD FIGURE AT FROME (Pictured)

At Frome Livestock Market on 23rd June, ‘a lovely thick Simmental heifer’ from RE Dury & Son reached 220.50p/kg and topped the gross heifer trade at £1424.  On the same day cows met another rock and roll trade, seeing best end cows become considerably dearer. Top of the day saw a new market record set at a huge £1730 or 189.50p/kg for a Simmental from KJ & R Hickery.

The sale of cull cows, heifers, and bulls at Brockholes Arms Auction Mart, Preston on 23rd June saw the top price per head going to Kevin Wildman with his Simx cows to gross £1,414, and 158 ppkg.

At Stirling on 23rd June, United Auctions sold 248 store cattle, 118 out of spec cattle, cast cows and bulls. Bullocks averaged 240.95p to 266.50p per kg for a 394kg SimX from Coxydene.

Moving to Dingwall & Highland Marts Ltd and their sale of prime cattle on 22nd June, prime bullocks averaged 239.1p (+24.7p) and sold to £1,557.60 gross for a 660kg Simmental cross from Easter Urray Farm, Muir of Ord selling to Messrs John M Munro Ltd, Dingwall.

Simmentals featured in many of the top prices at Sedgemoor Auction centre on 21st June.  A run of smart suckler bred Simmental steers from BA Sweet, Congresbury, met calls of 224.5 (2x) 222.5, 219.5, 218.5, and 216.5ppk. Further good suckler bred Simmentals sold at 217.5ppk from MD & GJ Curtis, Crediton, with a 726kg Simmental at £1,579.05 from MD & GJ Curtis. Simmental heifers (671kg) £1,452.72, and (650kg) £1,413.75 sold from HJ & HB Case Ltd.

On 21st June at Rugby Farmers Mart, weight paid when EJ Taylor & Son topped the price per head at £1650 and also the pence per kilo at 229ppk with his 720kg Simm steer that sold to Muchmeats Ltd.  In the bulls, a Simm from MC&MI Herbert topped at £1554.

At Market Drayton on 21st June and a sale of 135 barren cows, cull bulls and over age clean cattle, sucklers sold at a blistering trade and to a top of £1745.82 for an entry from Paul Tippets, Shifnal. At a sale of 212 calves and weanlings, also at Market Drayton on 17th June, 5 x Simmental bulls averaged a market leading £246 and to t a top of £280.

IMPORTANT UPCOMING SALE 1ST JULY: Please check out the sale of 60 Simmental cows with calves (20 pedigree registered) on behalf of Philip Paul & Sally Hawkins, (Blaenwen Herd), Blaenweneirch, Cwmfelin Boeth, Whitland. The sale will take place this coming Thursday, 1st July, at JJ Morris’s Whitland Mart, commencing at 10.30am. Stock bull pictured with this post.

SIMMENTALS ARE WELL KNOWN FOR THEIR DOCILE, RELAXED MANNER

SIMMENTALS ARE WELL KNOWN FOR THEIR DOCILE, RELAXED MANNER

Simmentals are well known for their docile, relaxed manner and what better example than this picture taken at David Cornthwaite’s Balgray Hill Farm, Lockerbie, in the run up to the first part of his commercial herd dispersal sale successfully held last week. Here’s mum just chilling out, shooting the breeze, and spending some quality down time with ‘junior’!

ALASDAIR HOUSTON

ALASDAIR HOUSTON

The British Simmental Cattle Society has been deeply saddened to hear of the passing of Alasdair Houston, MBE, DL, FRAgS, of Gretna Green, earlier this week.

A hugely respected and popular figure within agriculture, livestock and the pedigree sector, Alasdair met with great success in the sales and show ring over a sustained period with his noted Charolais and Aberdeen Angus pedigree herds. Earlier this year he was awarded the Sir William Young award for his ‘exceptional contribution to the world of cattle breeding’.

Serving a period as Chairman of the British Charolais Cattle Society, and also a period as Chairman of the Board of Harrison & Hetherington, Alasdair was a dynamic individual who coupled his roles in agriculture whilst being a hands-on farmer, and developing his significant and successful business interests in Gretna.

From a Simmental perspective, Alasdair also of course leaves his indelible fingerprint on the history of the breed having bred Gretnahouse Supersonic, a bull who is the second most prolific in the British Simmental herdbook.

On behalf of all members, the Society’s deepest condolences are extended to Lucy, Rafe, and Tara at this sad time.

2021 ‘VIRTUAL’ SIMMENTAL SHOW IS UNDERWAY, CLASS ONE IS OPEN!

2021 ‘VIRTUAL’ SIMMENTAL SHOW IS UNDERWAY, CLASS ONE IS OPEN!

Here we go again! The 2021 ‘Virtual’ Simmental Show is now officially underway. Please send in your photos for the first class, Autumn born bull calf, born between 1st July 2020 and 31st December 2020. You have until Friday 1st July to send your entries in to kate@britishsimmental.co.uk or information@britishsimmental.co.uk

You can enter more than one animal per herd (as many as you would like to) for each of the classes. Why not have a go and once again enjoy this ‘good fun’ competition whilst at the same time promoting British Simmental cattle around the world! Good luck everyone. Check out all of the ‘Virtual’ Simmental Show details at www.britishsimmental.co.uk/virtualsimmentalshow

SIMMENTALS AT THE HEART OF THE SIMMERS FAMILY LARGE-SCALE CATTLE ENTERPRISE

SIMMENTALS AT THE HEART OF THE SIMMERS FAMILY LARGE-SCALE CATTLE ENTERPRISE

Feature on the pedigree and commercial cattle enterprise, comprising some 600 cows, of the Simmers family, Backmuir Farm, Keith, Banffshire.

Over the past seven years, the Simmers family have transformed their large-scale cattle enterprise by moving to a closed herd and breeding their own replacements, with Simmentals at the forefront of this new streamlined system.

The farming business runs in conjunction with the family’s livestock trading business and construction company, with Philip Simmers working in partnership with his brother Symon and alongside his sons, Reece and Andrew. Within the mixed farming enterprise, based between Backmuir, at Keith, Morayshire, and Oldmeldrum in Aberdeenshire, they grow 2500 acres of cereals and run 600 cows.

Previously, Limousin and Blue cross Friesian heifers were bought in to form the basis of the suckler herd, but a diminishing availability of those type of females led to the decision to change entire system.  Philip explains: “We were struggling to get the numbers and type of heifers that we wanted, so we revaluated the whole system and decided to make changes. We used to sell suckled calves, but we decided to go entirely beef bred and start finishing all our own cattle. We started buying Sim-Luings and were really impressed with them – they’re efficient, hard-working cows, with minimal calving difficulties.”

The success with the Sim-Luings resulted in the Simmers establishing their own pure Luing and Simmental herds, in order to breed their own replacements. There are now 200 pure Luings, with some of those bred pure and some to the Simmental, and the family’s Backmuir Simmental herd of 50 cows. The rest of the herd is made up of Sim-Luings, which currently go to the Simmental or the Charolais bull.

“The Sim-Luings maintain their condition all year; they are easy fleshing and they pass that onto their offspring, whatever they are crossed with. We’re moving towards using entirely Simmental bulls on the Sim-Luings because we’ve been finding a big demand for the females,” says Philip.

For the number of females, 30 bulls are needed at any one time, and the Simmers are not afraid to spend big to get the bulls they want. Current bulls include Islavale Hamilton, Islavale Imperial and Corrick Hayden, while the new additions in February 2020, where Philip judged the pre-sale show, were the overall champion, Wolfstar Jackaroo at 18,000gns and the reserve senior champion, Wolfstar Jimmy Choo at 17,000gns. Earlier this month in a private sale, the herd bought Lisglass Kirk, a twenty-month-old son of Mullyknock Gallant, for £25,000 from Leslie and Christopher Weatherup, Co Antrim, a breed record for a bull bred in Northern Ireland.

“If we see something we like, then we try to buy it – we’ve never regretted paying a bit more to get a better quality bull, because we find they pay their way in the long-run. We’re looking for the same type of bull for the commercial and pedigree herds – long, with a good top and bottom line, good plates, a good, square back-end, correct on their legs, with character of the head.”

The cows run at the Simmers’ farms at Keith – they are batched as young heifers and tend to run in those same groups their whole lives. Bulls go out on June 1st for 10 weeks and Philip says that since switching breeds, 60% of the cows calve in the first cycle, with that number increasing all the time.

He adds: “The Sim-Luings are easily kept through the winter. They are housed purely because our ground conditions do not allow for them to be kept out, but they maintain their fitness all year and because of this, they calve easily. There’s a fine balance to make sure they’re not over-fat, but for us, they certainly need to be in good condition at calving time to ensure fewer problems.

“Heifers are calved from 30 months onwards, which again, works for our system. We find if we let them grow on naturally and don’t push them when they’re young, then they last a lot longer, are better on their feet and legs and have fewer problems as they get older.” The majority of the cattle calve in the spring on straw bedded courts and are put back outside as soon as possible. Calves are vaccinated for lungworm at the end of July and are weaned at the end of October, having had no creep feed up until that point.

Philip explains: “We went from taking two cuts of silage to just one cut and the cows and calves go onto the silage aftermath. The biggest daily liveweight gain in the calves is when they’re with their mothers on good grass, with plenty milk. It’s better for the farm in general too and we’re using less fertiliser.”  At the end of October, the calves are penned and fed on a silage and grain diet with supplement protein. They remain on that, with barley increasing on a monthly basis. Bull calves, which are all left entire, receive a more intensive grain diet for the last 8-10 weeks, while any heifers that are not being retained for breeding go on an ad-lib cereal-based diet for 8-10 weeks from the middle of May.

“The silage-based diet helps them to grow and then the grain puts the weight on. All last year’s spring calves had left the farm by August of the following year, with bulls averaging 390kg d/w selling to Highland Meats, while heifers average between 350kg and 380kg d/w,” says Philip.”  The heifers being retained for breeding receive a silage and straw diet with minerals and a little supplement grain in the first winter, and then only silage and straw.

Philip adds: “We try not to give those heifers much grain at all as we find they last longer and have fewer problems when they’re allowed to grow naturally. It also means they are fairly cheap to keep over the two winters until they calve.”

Depending on how many females are being kept, the team normally finish 500 calves annually, all on home-grown feeding, with only protein and minerals bought in. In addition to the feed barley, they also grow 2000 acres of malting barley each year, with all land work carried out in-house since 2010 by the team of six full-time staff across the cereals and livestock.

“With the reduction in staff nowadays, the cows really have to be able to look after themselves the majority of the time. In our experience, with the Sim-Luings we are producing an ideal cow for our system,” says Philip.  The team are planning towards a sale of females and bulls in 2022, which they hope to become an annual event. It will showcase just how far the businesses have come, through the family’s hard work and determination, which began with Philip and Symon’s father, Willie, who started working at Backmuir aged 14 before training as a blacksmith. He eventually went back and bought the farm that he started out at and the enterprise grew from there.

“We’ve always invested in land when we could and then paying that gives us the incentive to work harder. It’s difficult though in farming, to get a fair price for what you’re producing, so by concentrating on keeping up the quality of our females and getting our calves away as young as possible, it’s giving us the best chance of making a profit.”

An added focus for the family, has been their pedigree Simmental herd, which started in 2018 with the purchase of 20 females from the Starline herd. Another, bought as a bulling heifer, Sterling FCUK Impuls, ensured them plenty success in the showring in 2019, finishing female and reserve breed champion at the Scottish National Show at Kelso. She also won overall champion at Turriff Show; reserve female and reserve breed champion at the Royal Highland and Keith Show, and stood overall in the Scottish Beef Champion of Champions at Keith.

Aiming to breed the type of bulls that they like to buy themselves, their debut selling at Stirling in October 2020 went well, with sons of Corrick Hayden making 8000gns and 7000gns. This was followed up in February this year at Stirling when the sale second top price was 15,000gns for Backmuir Kraken 19, the first son to be sold at sale by Islavale Hamilton 16 and is out of the dam, Starline Kreole 11th.   A bull with ‘good power and style, and very correct in his legs’, he headed south of the border and to the new pedigree herd of AR Bulmer, Coultas Farm, Malton, North Yorkshire.

“Our goal is to produce the best of females, as that’s what ensures results in the long term, and if we can breed some good bulls along the way, then that’s ideal,” adds Philip.