SIMMENTAL, THE UK’s NO.1 CONTINENTAL BREED FOR AGE AT SLAUGHTER, CONTINUES TO TOP COMMERCIAL MARKETS ACROSS THE COUNTRY

SIMMENTAL, THE UK’s NO.1 CONTINENTAL BREED FOR AGE AT SLAUGHTER, CONTINUES TO TOP COMMERCIAL MARKETS ACROSS THE COUNTRY

MARKET BRIEFS SEES SIMMENTALS LEADING COMMERCIAL SALES AT ABERDEEN; SEDGEMOOR; FROME; DINGWALL; SHREWSBURY; STIRLING; MARKET DRAYTON; AYR; GISBURN; WORCESTER; HUNTLY; ST. BOSWELLS; CARLISLE; ANGLESEY; SELBY; HEXHAM; LANCASTER; TRURO; LOCKERBIE; AND RUGBY

A bumper coverage of Simmental Market Briefs this week, as we play a little catch up, kicks off with a look back at Gisburn Market and their sale of Prime Cattle on Thursday 29th July. Leading a strong trade for bulls was Mr & Mrs Fitton, Moss Hall Farm, Lostock, Bolton with a fifteen-month-old pedigree bull (pictured). Put to the sale due to a hurt shoulder he weighed 756kgs with a dlwg of 1.56kilos per day. Selling at 266ppkg he made a market high gross of £2019.

Aberdeen & Northern Marts sale of 824 store cattle on 20th August saw heifers between 401-450kg topped by Simms from Nigley, Evie at £1,160 and 272.3p. On the 19th August, the same market held a sale of cast cows and bulls. Beef Feeding Cows averaged £1,067.14 and sold to £1,190 gross including a 772kg Simmental from East Kincraigie, Lumphanan. Boning Cows averaged £748.68 (+£140.91) and sold to £945 gross (twice), and firstly for a 642kg Simmental from 8 Skaill, Forss. Bulls averaged £1,177 (+£102) and sold to £1,550 gross for a 1,150kg Simmental from Law Farm, Insch.

In the sale of calves and stirks at Sedgemoor on 21st August, a larger entry than expected saw a continuation of the strong trade. Top price to £1070 x3 (14m) for Pure Simmental steers from R & J Cook.

Through the sale of weaned calves at Frome on 18th August, a very buoyant particularly for the Continental x calves saw good consignments from Mark Peters of Sussex which saw 3mo Simmental steers at £528 and heifers to £420.

At Dingwall on 18th August, Dingwall & Highland Marts Ltd., sold 186 store cattle and 104 adult head of breeding cattle. Bullocks (105) averaged 230.7p and sold to £1,400 gross for a 720kg Simmental cross from 33 Auchintoul, Altass. Cow with male calf at foot (40) sold to £2,750 gross for a Simmental cross cow with a Charolais cross calf at foot from Gorthleck Mains, Inverness. Cow with heifer calf at foot (33) sold to £2,500 gross for a Simmental cross cow with a Charolais cross calf at foot from Gorthleck Mains, Inverness. Cow with twin heifer calves at foot sold to £2,800 gross for a Simmental cross cow with Charolais cross calves at foot.

In a sale of weanling bulls at Shrewsbury Livestock Market on 17th August, the top price and top average went to Simmental X bulls from WG Bebbington & Son which topped at £850 and averaged £814. TB restricted cattle were also a flyer with 16 month old Simmental steers topping the market at £1220 or 244ppk.

At United Auction’s sale of 824 store cattle at Stirling on 18th August, out of spec cattle averaged 184.47p to 203.50p per kg for a SimX from Boghall, and to £1270 for a SimX also from Boghall.In a sale of 524 rearing calves on 18th August at Market Drayton, a superb show of quality gave buyers plenty to choose from A strong trade saw Simmentals top the market at £450 for an entry from C.J. Tams, Stafford.

At Craig Wilson’s Prime Cattle sale at Ayr on 17th August, 49 Beef Cows peaked at £1480 for a Simmental off Girvan Mains.

At Sedgemoor on 16th August, the UTM & OTM sale saw heifers sold to a top of £1449 for a Simmental (680kg) from THJ Denbee.In the sale of store cattle at Gisburn on 14th August, clean cattle saw a super homebred Simmental from David Moorhouse lead the way when selling for £1395 to regular buyer Andrew Atkinson.

On Saturday 14th August suckler bred bulls from DJ & M Edwards topped the feeding bulls section at Worcester Market with £1,020 for a Simmental X (10 months).

At Aberdeen & Northern Marts sale of cast cows and bulls on 12th August, Beef Feeding Cows averaged £1,083.68 and sold to £1,245 for a 668kg Simmental Cross from Colligarth, Sanday. Dunn Farm, Watten sold a SimX at £1,230. On the same day at a sale of prime cattle the heifer trade was led by Honeybank with Sim x at £1,421.20. At a further sale held for Orkney consignors, the beef cow trade was led at 215.9p per kg for a 514kg Simmental from P & F Ross, Lenahowe, Sandwick. Prime Cattle sold to £1,393.75 gross for a 625kg Simmental and 235p per kg for a 560kg Simmental from Maesquoy Farms, Harray.

At Huntly, on Thursday 12th August, UA held a store & OTM cattle sale. Some top quality bred cattle were forward meeting a keen demand for both yearlings and forward types. In the heifers, the top gross was £1250 for a pair of 562kg SimX’s from Delfur Farms, Rothes. OTMS averaged 142.6p selling to a top of 191.2p per kg for a 570kg Sim from Delfur Farms, Rothes. The top gross in this section was £1260 for a 785kg Sim from Whitehills, Grange.

At H&H’s sale of store cattle at St Boswells on 12th August, the heifers per kilo were led by Simmentals from Coxydene at 240.5p.

At Stirling on 11th August, held a sale of store cattle, breeding cattle, cast cows and bulls, and rearing cattle. Beef Cows and Bulls (187) averaged 149.79p to 211.70p per kg for a SimX from Tulloch Farms. In the rearing cattle, the sale was topped at £665 for a SimX bull from M/s Hair, Kilbride. Another strong show of beef stirks was met with a sturdy trade throughout with the leading price being Lochside (SimX) £600.

At Carlisle on 11th August, a very good show of 505 store cattle forward at Borderways saw an absolute flyer of a trade where well fleshed cattle were the easiest to sell on the day. The Crichton family of Rottington Hall, Whitehaven featured in the top end prices with Simmental crosses at £1510. In the weaned cattle Simmental bulls reached heights of £1185 and £1110 from McColm and Brewis, Awhirk Farm.

On Monday 9th August 2021, Caledonian Marts Ltd at Stirling had forward 414 Store Cattle at their fortnightly sale. Heifers averaged 218ppkg selling to 254ppkg for a pen of Simmentals from Inshanks, Stranraer.

At H&H’s Prime Cattle sale held on 9th August at Carlisle, heifers were a flyer of a trade with a days top of £1761.18 achieved by Messrs Goldie, Newbie Mains, Annan with a Simmental purchased by Eric Hall.

Calves and Stirks met a firm trade with a keen demand for continental types at Gaerwen Livestock Market, Anglesey on 9th August. Female stirks topped at £450 for Simmentals from B Griffiths, Garth Fawr.

At the store cattle sale held at Selby market on 7th August, all classes were in demand. Top price store beast on the day was the pick of a great pen of Simmental bulls from WJ Hollingsworth, Midhope Hall Farm, Sheffield selling at £1405. Further bulls from the Hollingsworths sold for £1335,£1305,£1300.

At Thainstone on 6th August, Aberdeen and Northern Marts sold 1,150 Store Cattle, Young Bulls and Young and Weaned Calves. Bullocks (502) sold to £1,600 gross for a 738kg Simmental cross from Wallfield, Lochhills. Heifers (437) averaged 239.8p and sold to 328.7p per kg and £1,880 gross for a 572kg Simmental Cross from Gladhill, Garmouth. In the young and weaned calves a great show of cattle forward met a brisk demand especially forward condition cattle with an outstanding red and white Simmental Cross heifer, scaling 572kg from Messrs Smith, Gladhill, Garmouth topping the sale at £1,880.

Hexham & Northern Marts at their weekly store sale on 6th August saw cattle at 11-16 months led by Simmental x steers at £1030 from Hedley West.

In the sale of calves and stirks on 6th August at NWA’s Lancaster Auction Mart, Simmental bull calves sold to a top of £3335 for a Simmental X from JR Newsham & Son.

In a sale of Beef Cows at Truro Livestock Market on 4th August, Simmental x’s led the way to 164p (740kg) for Messrs R M & S J Jones of Breage, Helston.On 4th August at United Auctions Stirling market’s store sale, out of spec cattle averaged 225.55p to 233.90p per kg for a SimX from Wellees, and to £1310 for a Sim from Wellees.

If you have any snippets of Simmentals performing well at markets around the UK then please forward them to information@britishsimmental.co.uk We’d be very happy to include them in future Simmental Market Briefs.

ROCKYTOP ‘HARD TO STOP’ IN CLASS SEVEN OF THE 2021 SIMMENTAL VIRTUAL SHOW

ROCKYTOP ‘HARD TO STOP’ IN CLASS SEVEN OF THE 2021 SIMMENTAL VIRTUAL SHOW

A mighty well done goes to Gary and Angela Christie of the Rockytop herd, Glass, Huntly who have scooped the honours in Class 7 of the 2021 Virtual Simmental Show with Rockytop Luca. May 2020 born, Rockytop Luca is entirely homebred being sired by Rockytop I’m Yer Man and out of Rockytop Champagne’s Irma. For good measure three Rockytop bulls featured in the top eight placings!

A big thank you goes to our judge, Graham Allan of the noted Glenturk herd, Wigtown, Newton Stewart who has picked his top placings from another strong class, and this time featuring 65 young bulls. Look out for further comments from Graham in the judges video which will be posted shortly. Thanks to all breeders for your entries and support, it is hugely appreciated. The reach of this online competition is truly remarkable and worldwide. The 2021 Virtual Show is proving to once again be a big social media hit and a fantastic showcase and promotion of British Simmental. It is only possible with your continued support and pictures of your quality cattle. Thank you!

The eagerly anticipated results for Class 7 are as follows:

1st Rockytop Luca

2nd Islavale Lennon

3rd Caithness Laird

4th Islavale Lachlan

5th Rockytop Lorenzo

6th Rockytop Levi

7th Breaghey Lord Enniskillen

8th Springfield Legacy

MILLY IS IN THE MIX FOR MIXBURY HALL IN YOUNG HEIFER CLASS

MILLY IS IN THE MIX FOR MIXBURY HALL IN YOUNG HEIFER CLASS


Congratulations to VC Bailey, Mixbury Hall Farm, Mixbury, Brackley, Northants who has taken 1st Place in Class 6 of the Virtual Simmental Show, Spring born heifer calf, in a Class of 100 entries. The January 2021 born Mixbury Hall Milly, is by Tilbrook Frank, who also topped the Senior bull class in this year’s Virtual Show. Well done to Mixbury Hall, who also placed 9th in the class, and also to Backmuir and Corskie who both also had two entries place in the top 10.

A big thank you must go to our judge, Gayle Campbell from the Saltire herd, North Berwick, East Lothian, who had the huge but enjoyable task of judging 100 Spring born heifer calves. Look out for Gayle’s comments in a video on Facebook shortly.

Thanks again for all your entries which are helping make the 2021 Virtual Show a real Simmental showcase, with Breeders all over the UK getting involved. Congratulations to all who have placed in the class, the results are as follows:

1st Mixbury Hall Milly

2nd Auchorachan Molly

3rd Backmuir Sonia’s Minnie

4th Corskie Moody

5th Corskie Madonna

6th Hallway Diamond’s Millie

7th Innerwick Morag

8th Backmuir Lorette’s Mystic

9th Mixbury Hall Monica

10th Thorncliff Moya

‘GREEN DAY’ AS CORSKIE AND GARMOUTH TOP EXCEPTIONAL CLASS OF 197 SIMMENTAL COWS!

‘GREEN DAY’ AS CORSKIE AND GARMOUTH TOP EXCEPTIONAL CLASS OF 197 SIMMENTAL COWS!

Corskie Heaven from Mr WJ&J Green, Corskie, Garmouth, Fochabers has been placed first in the ‘huge’ Cow class of the 2021 ‘Virtual’ Simmental Show. In what has been the biggest class to date in the two years of the ‘Virtual’ show, the five-year-old Corskie Heaven, a Dirnanean Bradley daughter, prevailed from a class of 197 Simmental cows from breeders all over the UK. It was very much a ‘Green Day’ in the results with Garmouth Clover’s Honeysuckle, a Bel Dhu Capercaillie daughter, from Laura Green, Corskie Farm, Garmouth placing second, with Corskie Flume placing third. Remarkably, five Corskie prefixed cows placed in the top twenty in the class.

Having the not inconsiderable job of judging this huge class was Thomas Hill, Daw Lane, Wadworth, Doncaster. Thank you Tom for a job well done and please look out for Tom’s video comments that will be posted soon on Facebook.

The places in the Cow class are:

1st Corskie Heaven

2nd Garmouth Clover’s Honeysuckle

3rd Corskie Flume

4th Vale Royal Heavenly Girlie

5th Newbiemains Iris

6th Kilbride Farm Eunice 195F

7th Vale Royal Annie

8th Starline Lorette 51st

9th Killiworgie Exotic Rose

10th Bosahan Heather Blossom

11th Newbiemains Jewel

12th Kilbride Farm Dora 75F

13th Tillyeve Diana

14th Kilbride Farm Eunice 213G

15th Mixbury Hall Holly

16th Corskie Hollywood P

17th Corskie Hopefull

18th Islavale Gucci

19th Corskie Jemstone

20th Ashfurly Weikel’s Kate

So a mighty well done to the Green family and their Corskie and Garmouth herds for a tremendous performance. A massive thank you is extended to everyone who participated in this class. To get an entry of 197 cows has been exceptional and way beyond expectations. What a promotion for the breed to show the depth in quality of Simmental females in the British herdbook!

PLEASE NOTE: Entries for Class 5: Spring born bull calf. Born in 2021, close Midnight tonight, 29th July. Please send your entries in to information@britishsimmental.co.uk or kate@britishsimmental.co.uk

STOP PRESS: DRUMSLEED HIVY 16 TAKES THE SIMMENTAL HONOURS AT 2021 ROYAL HIGHLAND SHOWCASE

STOP PRESS: DRUMSLEED HIVY 16 TAKES THE SIMMENTAL HONOURS AT 2021 ROYAL HIGHLAND SHOWCASE

Drumsleed Hivy 16 from Mr G W Smith, Drumsleed, Fordoun, Laurencekirk, has won the Simmental Overall Championship at the 2021 Royal Highland Showcase held at Ingliston today, Tuesday 15th June. Lifting the Overall Reserve was Annick Fresia’s Kiki from Mr L D Quarm, Holehouse Farm, Annick Lodge Estate, By Irvine, Ayrshire.

Uniquely held without a live audience in attendance, due to the ongoing corona virus situation, the Royal Highland Showcase features seven days of events and judging being streamed on dedicated live channels to a worldwide audience.

Very much in keeping with the emphasis on youth across the cattle judges, the small Simmental section was judged by Tom Bruce of the Tillyeve Simmental herd, Udny, Ellon, Aberdeenshire.

No stranger to the showring, Drumsleed Hivy 16 from the Smiths has been successful previously at the Royal Highland Show, taking Male Champion when the Show was last held back in 2019. In the same year, Drumsleed Hivy also took Male and Overall Champion at the Scottish National Show in Kelso. The June 2016 born Drumsleed Hivy is sired by Haystar Cracker 11, who was purchased by Drumsleed at Stirling in May 2013, where he was also Male Champion, and is out of Drumsleed Valonia.

Commenting, Morag Smith described Hivy as having “a great temperament and a pleasure to show”. Drumsleed Hivy’s first son, Drumsleed Kingsman, recently sold for 11,000gns at Stirling back in February this year. Taking second place in the senior bull class was the November 2018 born Islavale Jabba from Gavin Brown, Springfield Farm, Penicuik, whilst the junior bull class was won by the September 2020 born Manor Park Lionheart from DC Houldey, Waterbeck, Lockerbie.

The October 2019 born Annick Fresia’s Kiki from Lachlan Quarm lifted the Overall Reserve Championship in what was her first outing in the show ring. This maiden homebred heifer, is sired by Wolfstar Gold Digger and is out of Annick Whitney’s Fresia. She is also half-sister to the Senior 2019 Stars of the Future Champion, Annick Trixie Belle 24th. Annick Fresia’s Kiki is one of a number of heifers being retained in the herd to increase female numbers, along with another Wolfstar Gold Digger daughter, Annick Ginger’s Lucia who also placed second in the Junior Female Class. Mr Quarm sees a good future with both Annick Fresia’s Kiki and Ginger’s Lucia, especially given their presence at a young age. In the senior female class, Coltfield Katie from J C MacIver took the top spot, with Islavale Kenya from C Jackson taking second place.

Representing the Simmental breed in the pairs competition was Islavale Jabba along with Annick Fresia’s Kiki.

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.