Whitebred Shorthorns and Blue Greys at the Bloch
by Jennifer
MacKenzie
 |
| George &
Ian Bell |
The Whitebred Shorthorn
has played an integral part of the farming system on
an upland Dumfriesshire unit for more than half a century.
It was demand for the Blue Grey, the hardy cross from
the Whitebred Shorthorn bull and the Galloway cow, that
led the Bell family to establish their own pedigree Whitebred
Shorthorn herd in the 1950s.
And now George Bell, his son Ian and wife Fiona remain
loyal to the system which perfectly suits their 2,000-acre
hill farm, The Bloch, near Langholm.
Attempts have been made to find another ideal hill cow,
but no-one has been able to oust the Blue Grey,” said
George.
The Blue Grey progeny are sold once a year with females
selling as suckler cows to all corners of the UK and
bullocks in demand by finishers supplying specialist
butchers who favour traditional breeds.
“We first started breeding the Whitebred Shorthorn
in the 1950s. We moved to The Bloch in 1941 and at the
time we were breeding pure Galloways as the family had
done for a long time,” said George Bell.
“At the time the Blue Grey was becoming more popular
and our hill farm leant itself to that type of animal.
“There used to be a lot more breeders of Blue
Greys with big sales at Haltwhistle and Newcastleton.
After a decline in interest, the breed seems to have
weathered the storm and breeders are coming back to the
Whitebred and breeding the Blue Grey.
“Some people went out of Blue Greys but have now
come back into them because the other breeds they were
using did not last,” said George Bell.
“The Blue Grey is very long-lived and you may
get an extra five years, and an extra five calves, compared
with other breeds. Beef producers farming in harsh conditions
might think they would get a better return from the bigger,
modern cows, but at the end of the day the Blue Grey
lives longer and is much easier to feed.
“We’ve sold Whitebred bulls to farmers as
far afield as Dartmoor, Derbyshire and Skye and as well
as using them on Galloways, quite a few are crossing
them very successfully with Highland cattle.”
An increasing number of Whitebred bulls are sold privately
off the farm, however, recent leading prices for the
herd at Carlisle sales are 3,000gns and 2,500gns
At the Bloch, which has heavy, wet land, the herd of
100 Galloway cows along with 10 purebred Whitebreds graze
at up to 1,000ft on unimproved hill land which has rushes
and heather. They would be capable of grazing on land
at twice that height.
It is their ability to thrive in these conditions, with
little or no concentrate feed, which is making the hardy
Whitebred and its crossbred progeny increasingly popular
again as low maintenance suckler cows.
Earlier born Blue Grey heifers are sold at the annual
Newcastleton sale at the end of October at six to seven
months old while others are kept on until the following
year selling at 16 to 18 months old.
Blue Grey bullocks sold at 18 to 20 months old store
through Longtown and
Newcastleton are also in demand
from finishers supplying beef to specialist local butchers.
“The Whitebred and the Blue Grey went through
a bad patch for popularity but now people who have tried
other breeds are coming back to the Newcastleton sale,” said
George Bell.
“They have compared the economics. As well as
the hardiness of these cattle, they live a lot longer
and are easier kept and are very fertile. The quality
of the meat from the Blue-Grey bullock is what more of
these specialist butchers are looking for,” he
added.
The Bells discovered the eating qualities of the pure
Whitebred Shorthorn when they recently sold two non-breeding
heifers which were approaching 30 months old to Waterbeck
on-farm butcher David McGregor. “It was the most
beautiful meat I have tasted,” said Mr Bell.
Galloway in-calf replacements are bought in mainly from
Cumbrian breeder Gordon Kyle, of Spoutbank, Brampton.
Cows begin calving in April after having been housed
since Christmas to save the ground, although the smaller
cows cause less poaching than other breeds.
During housing they receive half a kg of cake a day
as well as silage and straw. The cows are injected with
Rotavec to prevent scour with calf deaths minimal as
well as inoculated against fluke.
The cows calve easily with few assisted births and the
calves are quick to get on their feet and suckle.
The females do not suffer from mastitis nor do they
have problems with ticks.
“Traditional and native breeds are enjoying a
come-back both from a producer and consumer point of
view,” said Ian Bell.
“With the new Single Farm Payment, producers are
wanting a low maintenance animal and once the Over Thirty
Month rule is lifted it will enable those finishing cattle
on extensive grass fed systems to sell them a little
bit more mature,” he added.
The Bells also run a flock of 1,200 ewes along with
hoggs and 240 replacements, 1,000 being pure South Country
Cheviots with 200 Cheviot mules, which earned the family
the Wool Producer of the Year title in 1998.
Cheviot rams and females are sold across the UK, with a
number going into Wales – rams are sold at Lockerbie
and Builth Wells – to a top price of £6,200.
Last year’s Lockerbie champion sold for £6,000.
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