Outwintering cows on lowland cuts costs
by Claire
Powell
High wintering costs are making suckler
cows uneconomic for many Scottish hill farms.
So an Angus farmer has taken to outwintering
cows on lowland arable ground to reduce inputs
and avoid hauling feed into the hills.
Willie Porter and son James farm three arable
units, East Scryne, West Scryne and Carnegie,
totalling 364ha (900 acres), near Carnoustie,
on the Angus coast. They grow barley and wheat
for seed, plus potatoes. They also run 170
Blue Grey suckler cows (Whitebred Shorthorn
bull over Galloway cow), 75 spring calvers
and 95 which calve in autumn. Heifers go to
a Limousin bull, while Charolais bulls are
used over the cows.
The spring-calving cows live year-round at
the Porter's home farms, summering on permanent
pasture. The autumn calvers, however, summer
90 miles to the west, high in Glen
Lyon – Scotland's longest glen – at
Cashlie, a 3075ha (7600-acre) hill farm, which
peaks twice at more than 3000ft, also owned
by the Porters.
The north and south-facing steep slopes of
the glen are differing land types. One side
is mainly grass and heather on peat, the other
also has large areas of heather on peat, but
is mainly grass on limestone schist.
A flock of 1100 North Country Cheviots are
permanent Cashlie residents and share their
summer grazing with the 95 autumn-calving Blue
Grey cows and heifers, which are restricted
to the high ground, self-selecting their preferred
grazing areas of natural herbage, including
indigenous clover, which thrives up to 2000ft,
says Mr Porter.
Feed and bedding costs for over-wintering
upland herds in such remote and non-arable
areas such as Glen Lyon, are profit-busting
negatives. Quality
Meat Scotland (QMS) 2007 figures for LFA
Hill Suckler Herds show a net margin loss of £222.41
a cow. Feed, forage and bedding totalled £183.35.
The Porter's arable enterprises provide ample
over-wintering feed and bedding, but the only
feed hauled the 90 miles into Glen Lyon is
some hay for the ewes – insurance
against grazing running short.
Instead of hauling large quantities of straw
and feed into Glen Lyon for the cows, they
are taken back to the Porter's coastal farms
for calving and over-wintering.
"As soon as cows calve, groups of 32
to 35 are turned on to stubbles, under-sown
with Italian Ryegrass. In early November each
group starts strip-grazing a block of about
2.83ha (7 acres) of kale, strategically placed
on sheltered light land, close to the sea,
with access to dry lying areas," says
Mr Porter. "They also receive ad-lib straw – ideally,
one big bale a day – plus 2kg of
home-mix with minerals, until the bulls are
taken out."
Cows and calves remain outside until kale
is finished in late February, when they are
housed in the buildings vacated by the finished,
previous year's calf crop. The fields, benefiting
from several months of self-spread manure,
are ploughed and re-sown.
"The health of our cattle is a priority," says
Mr Porter. "The herd is vaccinated for
BVD (bovine viral diarrhoea), a great investment.
The only time we see any calf pneumonia is
when we bring cows and calves inside.
"So once the cattle are under cover,
we make sure calves can still get outside through
narrowly-open gates, enticing them out with
good silage, placed well away from the building.
This keeps them acclimatised to being outside,
avoiding a check at turnout."
The calves are weaned on 1 May. The bull calves,
which are kept entire, run outside, receiving
2kg of barley mix until housing on 1 September,
when they go on to ad-lib silage and barley
mix, to finish November/December.
Heifers summer naturally until introduced
to barley mix in early September. They are
housed in early October to finish on silage
and barley from December to February. Target
deadweight for bulls is 350kg at 12.5-14.5
months. Heifers are finished at about 280kg
at 14-18 months.
Some people regard Blue Greys as old fashioned,
hairy little cows, says Mr Porter. "They
are in fact purpose-bred suckler cows, with
hybrid vigour, extremely hardy, healthy and
fertile, with milk capable of rearing and making
the most of a quick-growing Continental-cross
calf. They also have tight, non-pendulous udders
with small, neat teats which a newborn calf
can get in its mouth and suck."
Blue Grey heifers are bought annually by Mr
Porter, at the November sale at Newcastleton
in the Scottish Borders. Bulls, both Limousin
and Charolais, are bought either privately
locally, or at Perth Bull Sales.
To Mr Porter a good bull is one which will
get females in calf, with calves that will
thrive, grow and quickly put on weight.
"I buy from pedigree herds I know and
choose my Charolais bulls for size and scale,
consulting the figures for a high liveweight
gain. I also note the calving EBVs, but I've
found that in reality there's no difference."
Bulls go into the cows on 1 December for 10
weeks. "Helped by the health and fertility
of the cows, conception is reliably above 95%,
with almost all calving within the first eight
weeks."
Once weaned, the autumn calvers return to
their Glen Lyon summer quarters in early May,
where, to avoid competing with ewes and lambs,
they go straight to high grazing, above 1200ft.
Mr Porter's autumn-calving suckler enterprise,
with the Angus arable land benefitting from
the muck, and the Glen Lyon sheep grazing enhanced
by being grazed down by cattle, might at first
glance seem a luxury, self-contained, "mixed
farming" enterprise, spread over 90 miles.
Certainly it would be extremely difficult to
justify keeping cows year round in Glen Lyon.
However, the principle of keeping cattle on
the two different farm types justifies a closer
look, he believes. "If arable farmers
with the facilities, feed and bedding, but
no stock, could work with upland farmers with
suckler herds who have to buy in all, or the
bulk of their winter feed and bedding, it could
be beneficial for all concerned," says
Mr Porter.
For hill farmers there are few realistic options
other than stock, he says. "Scotland's
cattle farmers have long benefited from a premium
for their Scotch beef, thanks to the reputation
and image of suckler beef produced in naturally
beautiful places like Glen Lyon. Yet, sadly,
the QMS figures show that without production-linked
subsidies, upland herds struggle to be economic."
If ways cannot be found to keep cattle in
the hills, the foundation of one of Scotland's
flagship products will be eroded, with negative
knock-on effects for employment in the many
associated businesses which rely on a thriving
beef industry, he adds.
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