Traditional Blue Grey Cattle are the mainstay at
Farney Shield
by Jennifer
MacKenzie
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| Martin and Marina
Wallace and their sons Trevor and Kevin |
Long, hard winters have
led the Wallace family to continue to run their Northumberland
hill farm along traditional lines as they have done since
1962.
And Blue Grey heifers – the hardy cross of the
Whitebred Shorthorn bull and the Galloway cow – are
a bonus for Martin and Marina Wallace and their sons
Trevor and Kevin.
Farney Shield lies high in the hills south of the village
of Ninebanks near Allendale. The farmhouse itself stands
at around 1,200ft above sea level.
The family farms a total of 710 acres of mainly rough
grazing and meadow ground, including 120 acres of better
ground at Hexham.
Farney Shield carries a herd of 70 Galloway cows, with
up to seven strong bulling heifers being bought each
autumn at Carlisle for herd replacements. There are also
grazing rights on Allendale Common.
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| Blue Grey Heifers |
Integral to the traditional system for the last three
decades is the Whitebred Shorthorn to produce Blue Grey
heifers, which are in increasing demand as hardy suckler
cows, and bullocks, now more and more sought after by
butchers who specialise in traditional breeds.
“The cattle we run are best suited for the hills
and a harsh environment. Some of the cows are well into
their teens and we have no trouble calving them to the
Whitebred,” said Martin Wallace.
“The weather forecasts govern our farming. Continental
cattle couldn’t survive on our farm. Our cows are
outside for two months longer in the winter than other
breeds.
“When we buy in Galloway replacements the heifers
have to be good on their legs to cope with the heavy
land and we look for good milking ability,” he
added.
Recent replacements have come from the Waughs of Kilnstown,
Forster of Smithsteads and Graham Noble, Demesne.
Female lines in the small herd of Whitebred Shorthorns
go back to the original cows. Bulls are tried at home
before any surplus are sold privately – last year
one sold to the Orkneys and another went to Buckinghamshire.
The easy-care cattle were all calved outside until the
Wallaces joined the North Pennines Environmentally Sensitive
Area scheme 13 years ago. The farm has a number of species
of birds and in particular black game.
Blue Grey heifers are all sold at the annual Newcastleton sale at the end of October which attracts around 1,000
head of cattle. Last autumn they sold up to £750
a head.
The heifers which are sold at between 20 and 26 months
old have ready buyers on hill and marginal farms from
as far afield at Tain in the north of Scotland to Cornwall
in the south. One borders beef farm has around 70 Blue
Grey cows from Farney Shield.
Last year heifers were sold to graze Kilnsey Crag near
Skipton as part of the Limestone
Project, an environmental
project looking at the success of native breeds of cattle
in helping re-generation of plant species which are in
decline.
Bullocks are sold at 18 months old at the special Kirkcambeck
autumn sale at Longtown
Mart with the remainder selling
in the spring, making up to £650 each.
The cattle are housed and straw bedded from mid December
to mid April, with the majority of cows calving inside.
There are few calving difficulties which helps keep vets
bills down.
They are fed big bale silage and hay, the latter being
made off the drier ground. Blue Grey calves are fed 1kg
a head of concentrate.
As well as being noted for breeding Blue Greys, the
Wallaces have a name for their Mule gimmer lambs.
They run 800 Swaledales, which includes 150 hoggs, and
have a small flock of 14 Bluefaced Leicesters. Four hundred
Swaledales are wintered away on lowland farms in Northumberland
and Cumbria.
Of the Swaledales, 200 are bred pure to produce flock
replacements with 450 crossed with the Bluefaced Leicester.
North of England Mule gimmer lambs are sold at Lazonby
where 288 averaged £83 in 2004. They are in demand
from flockmasters across the country.
Wether lambs are sold finished through Hexham Mart from
December through to April, the majority being finished
inside.
The Swaledales crossed with the Leicester start lambing
at the beginning of April with the pure-breds starting
later in the month.
Bluefaced Leicester rams are not used as lambs and any
surplus are sold as shearlings at Lazonby or Hawes.
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