Southdown Sheep Society, NZ

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By PAT DEAVOLL – NZ Farmer

Waimate southdown stud breeder Chris Medlicott

Waimate southdown stud breeder believes stockmanship plus record keeping, pedigree and understanding what is behind the animal.

Topping ram sales provides undeniable satisfaction for Chris Medlicott, only bettered by producing fertile commercial southdowns, writes Pat Deavoll.

A top price of $16,000 for a southdown ram at the Christchurch Ram and Ewe Fair is just the icing on the cake for stud breeder Chris Medlicott. Record sale prices are satisfying, but remain secondary to the Waimate farmer’s main drive of producing top commercial sheep.

Southdown stud breeder Chris Medlicott had the top price at the recent Christchurch ram sale for his southdown ram Clifton Downs-279-14.

Southdown stud breeder Chris Medlicott had the top price at the recent Christchurch ram sale for his southdown ram Clifton Downs-279-14.

Even so there is no doubt Medlicott is good at what he does. Since 1997 he has consistently topped the sales, and in 2003, and again in 2005, broke the world record for the price paid for a sheep.

“A lot of the guys I sell rams to were getting 400 lambs off mum a few years ago, and now they are getting 900 lambs. I take more pleasure out of that than the record prices my rams make,” he says.

Clifton Downs-279-14 (which topped the Christchurch sale this year) was sought after by several southdown breeders with commercial operations, Medlicott says.

“They all said he was the ram they wanted, which I got a buzz out of. They were bidding up to $10,000, then the price got too high and they fell off. Todd and Fleur Anderson (of Winton) bought him.

“The bidders reckoned he was the ideal flock ram. His progeny would have enough condition at 14 kilograms to be marketable to the works, but have the conformation to take them through to 21 kilograms if necessary.”

A lot of high growth rate sheep are too lean and not prime enough to go to the works at 14kg, Medlicott says. The commercial farmer needs lots of options because climactic factors like drought or a cold winter can cause delays in fattening lambs.

Medlicott has recently merged his own southdown stud, Tasvic Downs, into the Clifton Downs stud, which he took over from his father Bill in 2003.

“Tasvic Downs doesn’t exist now but in saying that Clifton Downs-279-14 was out of a Tasvic ewe.”

Clifton Downs Stud was started by the partnership of Medlicott’s grandfather Jack, and his father Bill. They were entering the Smithfield lamb competitions, but couldn’t find the terminal sires to produce lambs to do well, says Medlicott. So they started their own southdown stud which grew to become one of the leading flocks in New Zealand.

Friends visiting from Australia in the 1970s had bought a ewe at a dispersal sale at the renowned Punchbowl Stud outside Oamaru. The ewe cost $400, a considerable sum of money in those days. It was given to Medlicott, aged 15 at the time, as a thankyou for his family’s hospitality.

For a stud to be registered, 10 ewes were needed so Medlicott was given another ewe by southdown breeder John Macaulay, and his father gave him the other eight.

“Instead of studying for school cert I was busy looking up pedigrees,” he says.

“I kept building up the numbers and in 1992 got a first prize at the Christchurch A&P Show, and the second highest price for a ram at the sale that year. The ram (Tasvic-27-90) sold for $3400 and was exported to America.”

Since then Medlicott has twice topped $16,000 for a ram and reached about $14,000 “a few times.”

Southdowns rank well ahead of other breeds at the sales, Medlicott says.

“Southdown breeders are not frightened to stand up and spend money on a top ram. The Andersons have bought a lot of expensive rams off me. And one of the families who gave me my first ewe is buying semen off this ram. It will be going to the AI station next week. So the purchaser has made an investment for his flock but is also able to sell semen all around the world.”

He says there has been interest in the ram from South America, and the animals “easy-doing” type will be ideal for the native grasses its progeny will be expected to feed on. The ram has good muscle and good growth but has a “soft handle,” Medlicott says. By this he means the animal has a soft muscle, with an even cover, and a little bit of subcutaneous fat.

“The world has become “anti-fat,” and New Zealand sheep too lean. There still needs to be a degree of fat for an animal to function, he says.

“I feel there has been too much emphasis on growth and leanness in the past. I’m interested in a sheep that will grow as well as put down muscle, so a farmer in drought conditions or a cold winter like Southland’s been through, still has the ability to fight off the elements and have a product at the end of the day. You can get this through genetics, but it’s also important to use stockmanship. There needs to be balance.”

Medlicott has been cat-scanning his rams, and strategically mating the best with a fattier-type ewe. There have been trials done in Australia where a sheep with moderate growth, good handling, conformation and “easy doing” has been getting as good as or better growth rates in extreme conditions as really lean sheep.

“The other thing that is interesting about Clifton Downs-279-14 is that although he wasn’t the highest scanner, he had a very good hindquarter and a reasonable eye muscle area (EMA). I’ve EMA’d all my rams and finding that the highest cat scans are not quite as high as the EMA scans. My theory is that there might be more intramuscular fat in some of the higher muscled animals. I think we need intramuscular fat – we’ve seen it in the beef world – for the animal to survive and taste good. As ram breeders, I think we need to study what’s going on in the beef world and makes some informed decisions.”

Southdowns were very popular in the 1950s and 1960s but by the 1970s had become over-fat and lost ground. Medlicott says his grandfather was selling 180 rams a season in the 1960s. A decade later it had got so bad, one year he only sold seven rams.

“Breeding southdowns in the 1970s and 1980s, you wondered why you did it. I got rubbished by mates, but I could still see a future in them.”

As a stud breeder, Medlicott feels he must always be thinking ahead to where the market is to be profitable. And change needs to be fronted by the leading farmers and breeders.

“I’m always trying to go the next step – think where the industry is going and try and anticipate it.”

These days southdowns are a popular terminal choice. For good early maturity and “out the gate in a hurry” efficiency they take a lot of beating, Medlicott says. They have created a niche for themselves in Southland, Canterbury and Hawkes Bay.

“It comes down to their consumption of dry matter to output efficiency.”

Medlicott doesn’t use estimated breeding valuations (EBVs); I’m “outside the square,” he says.

“I am very interested in EBVs and have been told by my peers I should be on Sheep Improvement Ltd (SIL), but I’m not. SIL is rewarding extreme growth and leanness and I think this is promoting the wrong animals.”

“For me it’s stockmanship plus record keeping and pedigree and understanding what is behind the animal.”

Medlicott thinks his ewes are the most important part of his flock. A lot of breeders get wrapped up in their rams, he says, but the maternal lines are essential. Ewes with “a whole lot of good breeding in the background” will keep on performing

His stud is only about 20 per cent of his income, but it is his passion.

2015 Feilding Stud Ram & Ewe Fair

Posted by Christina On December - 13 - 2015

2015 Feilding Stud Ram and Ewe Fair – Tuesday 8th December, 2015.

 

Willowhaugh Enterprises Ltd.

Lot 45         Willowhaugh 174/14 (Rep)          $2000.00 –

Lot 46         Willowhaugh 202/14 (Rep)         $1800.00 – Mrs.R.M.Bradley

Run 2

Lot 65         Willowhaugh 111/14 (Rep)           $1500.00 – Mangaotea Stud Stock

Lot 66         Willowhaugh 56/14                       $5000.00 – S.W.Brannigan

S.W.Gray

Lot 47         Silverdale 123/14 (Rep)                 Passed

Lot 48         Silverdale 50/14                             Passed

K.L.& S.J.Johnston

Lot 49         Rawa 112/14                                     $1000.00

Lot 50         Rawa 80/14                                       Passed

J.T.Wynyard

Lot 51         Moor End 12/14                                  $800.00

Lot 52         Moor End 11/14                                  $800.00

R.T.& J.M.McKenzie,

Lot 53         Glen Orrin 48/14                                 $800.00

Lot 54         Glen Orrin 64/14 (Withdrawn)

Glenhazard Holdings Ltd.,

Lot 55         Wiri 134/14                                        $1000.00 C.D.G.Prouting

Lot 56         Wiri 69/14                                         $3000.00 K.L.& S.J.Johnston

S.P.& P.J.Innes

Lot 57         Mangakura 120/14                                $2500.00

Lot 58         Mangakura 62/14                                  $ 800.00

Lot 59         Mangakura 62/14                                  $1100.00

D.R.Hunt

Lot 60         Banbury 503/14                                   $900.00

S.G.& P.D.Baker.

Lot 61         Te Mara 24/14 (Rep)                           $900.00

J.R.& D.F.Gray.

Lot 62         Oakdale 3/14                                        Passed

Murvale Fam Ltd.,

Lot 63         Murvale A37/14 (Rep)                        Passed

Lot 64         Murvale A51/14                                 $800.00

 

 

 

As per the sale sheets.

J.M.Pinfold (Mrs), and C.H.Ramsay (Miss),

Secretaries.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2015 Canterbury Elite Ram & Ewe Sale

Posted by Christina On December - 5 - 2015

Congratulations to Chris Medlicott for achieving top price of the sale, $16,000 for Clifton Downs 279/14.  Sold to Taffy Ltd.

Waidale 872/14 was sold for $8,000 to RJ & JM McKenzie & D & J Murray and Clifton Downs 356/14 was sold for $7,200 to Waidale and Dalness studs.

Overall Southdowns had a solid sale with 40 sold (4 passed & 8 withdrawn) for an average over  $2,300.

Sale Details:

Macaulay BC  – 900, 2000, 900,2000

Willowhaugh Enterprises Ltd – WD, 4000, 2100, 6500

Medlicott Chris J – 16000, 1200, 1000, 4800, WD, 7200, 2500, 1000, 1200, 2000

Alexander J L – 1200, 1000

Gillespie A D –  800, 0, 1000, 800

Christey AC & LK – 900, 3500, WD, 800, 1000

Williams Phil & Fiona – 800, 2600, 2000, 1000

Macaulay JJ –  WD, WD, WD

Moorhead NJ –  800, 2000

King D – 0, 0, WD

Gill RE & J – 800, 800

Williams Ike – 8000, 1000, 0

Brannigan SW – 2000, 800

McKenzie RJ & JM – 1000, WD

Robertson Dave – 3400

McKenzie Dave – 1400

 

Elite Ram and Ewe Sale Results

Posted by Christina On December - 4 - 2015

The Canterbury A&P Association Elite Ram and Ewe Sale, held Friday 27 November, attracted a quality line up, with 231 Rams and 11 Ewes entered into the sale. With 144 rams selling, the average sale price was $1861 and $250 for ewes with 6 selling; …Elite Ram and Ewe Sale Results

The Canterbury A&P Association Elite Ram and Ewe Sale, held Friday 27 November, attracted a quality line up, with 231 Rams and 11 Ewes entered into the sale. With 144 rams selling, the average sale price was $1861 and $250 for ewes with 6 selling; total sales of $269,500 were recorded.

The highest price was reached by a Clifton Downs Southdown Ram (Chris Medlicott, Waimate), selling for $16,000.

Other top prices were as follows: Corriedale – $2900 (Wattlebank, GR and RW Wilson, West Melton); Hampshire – $3100 (Blue View, Gudex Family, Ashburton); Romney – $2400 (Gatton Park, DA & SJ Wyllie, Ashburton); Poll Dorset – $2000 (Brooklands, A&P McIlraith, Leeston); Border Leicester – $4000 (Hermiston, GJ Letham, Ashburton); Texel – $4000 (Hemingford, SEJ & V Holland, Culverden); South Suffolk – $4200 (Inver, SJ Sinclair, Ashburton); Suffolk – $6700 (Stoneylea, AW & JH Adams, Christchurch).

Anthony Cox, Stud Stock Rural Livestock and Canterbury A&P Association Sheep Committee Member, said that the results were positive.

“There were a few less rams sold this year, but given the current industry climate it was a very positive result with the average selling price up on last year.

“The standard was very high and good rams were sought after. It was great to see that those rams that didn’t go to stud duty were able to be purchased by commercial buyers for a very reasonable price.”

Southdown sheep rule in meat breed ring

Posted by Christina On November - 21 - 2015

TIM CRONSHAW – NZ Farmer

The-Canterbury A&P Show

Southdowns made nearly a clean sweep of the sheep meat breed titles at the Canterbury A  P Show.

Apart from a suffolk winning the Miss Canterbury ewe hogget competition, owned by Simon Howard, the southdowns had their own way.

Winner of the all-breeds super ewe meat breed championship was a southdown ewe and triplets bred by Woodbourne daughter and father team, Christina and Ian Jordan. The class is based on performance figures and judges interpretation of their structure.

The Jordans, who have run their stud since 1956, claimed the title with the ewe’s mid-August born triplet lambs carrying a collective carcass weight of more than 100 kilograms. They also won the supreme meat sheep of the show ribbon with the same ewe and triplets.

“This year was a better result for us than last year because we didn’t win the meat sheep then after winning it four years in a row before,” said Christina Jordan. “It’s been a very good result for us and we have had a good show.”

She said the stud’s long breeding programme could be credited for the success along with their efforts to breed structurally sound and well muscled sheep using estimated breeding values.

This was their sixth all-breed meat title. The Jordans also won the trifecta ribbon with three southdown ram hoggets.

Dave Gillespie and Phil Williams won the southdown champion ram title and the best carcass meat breed sheep of the show with a southdown ram they bought off the Jordans two years ago for $16,000 at the Christchurch ram sale. The ram was paired with the Jordans’ championship ewe to win the all-breeds pair title.

The all-breed supreme wool animal of the show title was won by father and son Allan and Simon Paterson, from Ranfurly, with a two year old poll merino ram.

This was the first time they had shown the ram with a 19.5 micron fleece last shorn a year ago and measuring about 150mm in length. The fleece will eventually be bound for the active wear market.

“He’s got pretty good wool on an excellent carcass and he’s a good conformation ram built like a crossbred sheep with merino wool on him. He will probably cut 12 kilograms of wool when we take him home.”

The ram was the great grandson of their previous winner of the title.

Paterson said the Armidale Merino Stud, established also in 1956, was a family operation on a farm that had been in the family since the 1880s on high country blocks with other blocks on rolling hill country.

“We are pretty passionate about the industry and we have been here for a long time.”

Among the other wool sheep winners was Parnham Hill Stud’s  James Hoban from Culverden who took the all-breeds super ewe wool breed title with an eight year-old corriedale ewe with triplets at foot.

In other events, the Mint Lamb Competition was won by Hawarden’s Andrew Sidey with a texel cross poll dorset lamb. Sidey is a regular exhibitor of corriedales at the show each year. The highest yield award was won by Paul Gardner – last year’s competition winner. The overall winner was decided on a culmination of yield, tender testing and taste.

Results Canterbury A & P Show 2015

Posted by Christina On November - 20 - 2015

Southdown

(Judge(s)): Todd Anderson
Sandra Howard – Associate Judge
Mark Copeland, Simon Howard – Merial Alliance Class

Ram, over 18 months, shorn. (7):
Gillespie/Williams 1, Jordan I M & C A 2, Gillespie/Jebson/Macaulay 3.

Alliance NZ Ltd Ram, under 18 months, shorn – winner receives the CENTRAL (17):
Christey A C & L K , Gillespie A D , Christey A C & L K , Jordan I M & C A 1, Medlicott Chris J 2, Medlicott Chris J 3.

Alliance NZ Ltd & Merial Ancare Quality Meat Yield Class, two Rams, (9):
Jordan I M & C A 1, Medlicott Chris J 2, Williams P G, F C 3, Medlicott Chris J 4, Christey A C & L K 5, Gillespie A D 6.

Champion Southdown Ram : 
Gillespie/Williams.

JOHN DEANS SOUTHDOWN SHEEP TERRINE. 
Canterbury A&P Association trophy awarded to John Deans in 1884:
Gillespie/Williams.

Reserve Champion Southdown Ram :
I M & C A Jordan.

Ewe, over 30 months, shorn, and her suckling lamb(s). (5):
Jordan I M & C A 1, Christey A C & L K 2, Jordan I M & C A 3.

Ewe, 18 to 30 months, shorn and her suckling lamb(s). (1):
Jordan I M & C A 1.

Essential Nutrition Ewe, under 18 months, shorn. (10):
Williams P G, F C , Moorhead N J , Moorhead N J , Medlicott Chris J 1, Williams P G, F C 2, Medlicott Chris J 3.

Allflex NZ Ltd Pair of Ewes, under 18 months, shorn. (8):
Medlicott Chris J 1, Christey A C & L K 2, Williams P G, F C 3.

Champion Southdown Ewe. Winner receives the Perpetual Trophy – JARMAN CUP.:
Jordan I M & C A.

Reserve Champion Southdown Ewe :
Chris J Medlicott.

Supreme Champion Southdown :
I M & C A Jordan.

Most Points Southdown Section – winner receives the JAMES DEANS CHALLENGE SHIELD.:
I M & C A Jordan.

Allflex Best Carcase Southdown. Allflex kindly donate a $50 voucher.:
Gillespie/Williams.

Quad lambs a rarity in the southdown breed

Posted by Christina On September - 20 - 2015
Bu JILL GALLOWAY, NZ Farmer

In 65 years of farming southdown sheep, Wattie Gray had never seen one of his ewes give birth to a set of quaduplets.

[KGVID poster=”http://www.southdownsheep.org.nz/blog/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/grey-vid-thumb2.jpg” width=”580″ height=”330″]http://file2.stuff.co.nz/622/12512622.mp4[/KGVID]

That was until last week, when  he and daughter Janet Gray came across the brood on the family’s Manawatu farm in Rongotea.

“The southdown ewe is only a two-tooth [2-year-old] and these are her first lambs. She was heavily pregnant and I thought perhaps big twins, but I came out and there were four lambs,” said Janet Gray.

Janet Gray cradles the quads

Janet Gray cradles the quads

“The ewe that had the four live lambs did really well. Two lambs were slightly bigger, but they were a pretty even size.  All were born alive, stood up and were in good condition.”

She and her father said they had seen triplets before, but the quads were a new thing.

Some breeds of sheep produced quads and even quintuplets, but four was a rarity among the southdown breed, she said.

All the lambs had survived and were sprightly  at more than a week old, but Janet Gray said she had mothered two of the four lambs on to two ewes whose own offspring had died.

“It takes pressure off the ewe that had all four – now she only has twins to worry about, and they are the smaller lambs.”

The ewe had three ram lambs and one ewe lamb, which had all been given  small, fleecy covers  to help keep them warm.

“The covers are made out of wool. They are not water-proof, but they keep the lambs warm against the cool wind. The southdown lambs are born with little wool on them. So the covers give them a helping hand.”

She said most lambs born at the stud farm were given such covers.

Southdown NZ National Tour 2015

Posted by Christina On May - 17 - 2015

Southdown – Sheep of the Show at Masterton 2015

Posted by Christina On April - 27 - 2015

Southdown Ewe wins 2015 Masterton All Breeds Sheep of the Show

Wiri 43/13 (Mangakura 74/11 – Wiri 18/11)

Record price for ram ‘humbling’

Posted by Christina On February - 27 - 2015
Todd Anderson

Winton farmer Todd Anderson with his Southdown rams.

Southland farmers Todd and Fleur Anderson sold a southdown ram for $15,000 at their on-farm auction earlier this month.

It was the highest price achieved for a ram across all breeds this year. “It was quite humbling.

“To get that sort of endorsement means we are going in the right direction,” Todd Anderson said.

Tralee Southdowns

Southdown rams on Todd Anderson’s Winton property.

Anderson said the terminal sire ram was “definitely the best” he had bred and was exceptionally early maturing with great definition and muscling in the hind- quarters.

“He’s a phenomenal ram with great SIL (Sheep Improvement) figures.”

The ram was bought by leading southdown stud breeder Chris Medlicott, of Waimate.

Medlicott holds the world record price of $16,000 for a Clifton Downs southdown ram which he sold in 2005.

The southdown was renowned for its fast growth rates and early maturing carcass and thrived in dry conditions like those being experienced on the east coast of the South Island. Anderson said being able to finish lambs early in the season was a key driver of profit, after lambing percentage.

“If you can get your lambs away early then you can put the feed into your ewes or other stock.

“There’s huge opportunity for farmers to improve their mean kill date.”

Anderson has always had an affinity with southdowns – the “oldest and purest” sheep breed in the world.

But, they haven’t always been so popular.

Once regarded as a “short and dumpy” sheep, they now have longer leaner frames and yield well.

Anderson established his Tralee Southdown stud in 2002 after he paid good money for 30 ewes at the Charleston stud dispersal sale at Oamaru.

Anderson grew up in Invercargill and worked as a rural finance manager for the BNZ for 10 years but always had a desire to go farming.

He started leasing a small block near Invercargill to run his sheep before buying his 325 hectare property at Kauana, near Winton.

Anderson’s stud now numbers about 200 southdown ewes, but does not farm any commercial sheep – preferring to stick with breeding stud sheep which also includes a romney stud.

“My passion is genetics. Even the dogs in my kennels have to be well bred,” Anderson said.

He isn’t scared to pay for good genetics and in 2003 paid $13,200 for a ram bred by Medlicott.

“I always buy as well as I can.

“I’ve bought a lot of rams off Chris because he has the No 1 southdown stud in the country.”

Anderson used his top southdown ram as a hogget over 24 ewes and was pleased with how his progeny performed. A pair of his sons were placed first in the Merial carcass evaluation class at the Gore A&P Show.

He sold 50 rams at his on-farm auction in early February for an average price of $1240, of which five went to stud breeders and the rest to commercial farmers.

Historically, southdown rams had been mainly mated to romney ewes, but were now used over a wide range of breeds.

Anderson was focused on breeding early maturing southdown rams which performed in a range of environments.

“It’s important to finish lambs early. The sooner they are out the gate you can utilise that dry matter for other stock and it’s not costing you as much to get them to weight.”

Anderson said one of his clients was mating their ewe hoggets to the southdown and lambing them in October and killing 60 per cent of them at 17kg in a weaning draft in January.

He also raves about southdown meat.

“It’s the only [sheep] meat we eat. It has a beautiful texture and it’s a very fine grained meat.”