Stainbank herd lands back-to-back Craven Dairy Auction championships
The Stainbank pedigree Holstein dairy herd of Robin Jennings at Hill House Farm, South Stainley, Harrogate, clinched back-to-back championships at the opening July Craven Dairy Auction at Skipton Auction Mart. (Mon, July 6)
Mr Jennings, who won the title at the main June show and sale, repeated the feat at the latest renewal with his first prize newly calven heifer, acquired as a calf from the Startover pedigree dairy herd of Gavin Clarke, of Brimham Lodge Farm, Ripley.
Startover
Seaver Annabel, a daughter of R-E-W Seaver, out of Startover Whistler Annabel,
came to market 11 days calved and giving 31 litres, going on to sell for the
day’s top price of £1,900 when returning to her Brimham Lodge breeders. Mr
Jennings also sold a second newly calven heifer for £1,620 to
Mark Goodall in Tong, Bradford.
Show
judge Colin Whitelock, of Gargrave, chose the second prize newly calven heifer
as his reserve champion. It came from Bishop Thornton’s Peter Baul, who runs
the Ravensgate pedigree Holstein herd at Watergate Farm.
Ravensgate
Honesty 155 is by Penn-England Garrison, a Genus sire the vendor has often used
to good effect, out of Ravensgate Dolman Honesty. The Honesty line has
well-proven breeding lines stretching back over half a century and the
runner-up, 17 days calved and giving 34 litres, made £1,790 when joining Alf
Townsend in Southfield, Burnley.
The
Robinson family, of Eldroth, stepped up with another classy newly calven
home-bred commercial heifer, which earned a yellow rosette as third in class,
selling for £1,580, again to Mr Goodall.
First
and second prizes in the show class for newly calven cows both fell to David
Leeming, of Burnt Yates. The red rosette winner, a third calver giving 50
litres, sold away well at £1,800 to
Wigan’s Tom Green, who also paid £1,640 for the runner-up.
While
there were just three in-calf cattle forward, trade was notably strong,
averaging £1,433 per head. They also had their own show class, won by RA&HE
Simpson, Easingwold, with an August-due heifer that sold locally for £1,470
to John Howard in Heslaker.
I
Oliver & Partners, of Darley, took second and third prizes, achieving
selling prices of £1,440 and £1,420 respectively, both also falling to Mr
Howard.
A
standalone show class for coloured cows saw Skipton regulars David and Pauline
Brown, of Longside Farm, Ramsgill, take first and second prizes with home-bred newly
calven Brown Swiss entries from their Luna pedigree herd.
The
red rosette winner, 19 days calved and giving 35 litres, sold for £1,500, with
the runner-up making £1,230. The Browns came out of milking a year ago and are
selling their cows as they calve.
David
Leeming took third prize with another Brown Swiss heifer that headed the class
prices at £1,520. The eight Brown Swiss entries averaged £1,218 per head.
With
50 head forward, pedigree newly calven heifers averaged £1,454 and their
commercial counterparts £1,405. Pedigree newly calven dairy cows sold to £1,490
for an entry from the Lawson family in Arthington, while the 14 newly calven
commercial cows on offer averaged £1,396 per head.
Dairy-bred calves sell well....
Black and white youngsters comprised 48 of the 67-strong entry at Monday’s weekly rearing calf sale. With an average age of 33 days, they achieved a robust selling average of just over £103 per head, peaking at £175 for a bull calf from Lothersdale’s Geoff and Margaret Booth.
Trade was again extremely buoyant, with Continental-cross entries averaging £428 per head across the board, led at £530 by a British Blue-cross heifer calf from Richard Sutcliffe, of Queensbury, who also headed the bull calf prices at £485 with another Blue.
Native breed entries also sold well, in particular a nice run of Aberdeen Angus youngsters all around 42-days-old from the Hartley family in Bolton Abbey, who had the top price bull and heifer calves at £375 and £350 respectively. The overall native average was £318 per head.