The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Joyce Campbell on the North Tup Tour

- Joyce Campbell

Autumn is a very special time of year for me. As a farmer I’m in the privileged position to see the countrysid­e around me and its resident wildlife preparing for winter.

Pulling on my boots this morning I could hear the sound of wild geese overhead on their migration south.

The red deer rut is well under way and it’s great to see the stags in action rounding up their harems of hinds.

The hills all around are ringing out with stags roaring.

There is no better entertainm­ent than to listen to their impressive sounds on a still evening.

Bryan Burnett and a team from Radio Scotland visited us last week to do a short interview for a programme called My Dream Job.

It made me reflect on how very lucky I am to be farming and doing a job I love.

One of the questions I was asked was how I came to be a farmer?

I explained that I started work after leaving school, with a major local employer, the Dounreay Atomic Energy Authority.

Very quickly I realised that there were people in the world who did not enjoy their work.

From the start it was an alien environmen­t from what I had been used to in growing up on a hill farm.

My short time at Dounreay gave me enough impetus to go to agricultur­al college. I thoroughly enjoyed my time at Auchincrui­ve but I am also glad to have experience­d a job other than farming, even if it wasn’t for me.

Lack of job satisfacti­on or enthusiasm are words that could not be applied to the group of shepherds who I joined last weekend, for the annual North Tup Tour of flocks of North Country Hill Cheviots bound for the October sales in Lairg and Dingwall.

I was a bit of a lightweigh­t as I only managed one 12-hour shift and missed out on the North West section done on the previous day.

There were many impressive tups on show, giving plenty opportunit­ies for even the most discerning and hard to please shepherds from throughout the country to obtain top quality new bloodlines for their flocks.

Through the course of the day I took pictures of every group of tups that I visited and also of the countrysid­e we drove through.

I put it all together on a slideshow along with music from a great young Scottish band called Heron Valley.

In the first 24 hours of posting on to Facebook it had been viewed five-andhalf-thousand times and shared by 48 different people.

I think I may have overdone some of the tourist shots as one of the comments left was that the North Coast 500 could be renamed North Country Cheviot 500.

Ultimately flock masters in the north have to work that wee bit harder to persuade potential buyers of their stock, that the long trip to the North Highlands, historical­ly the home of the North Country Cheviot breed, is well worthwhile.

View Joyce’s video at https://www.facebook.com/jock.campbell.169/ posts/1780593528­845279.

 ??  ?? Auchentoul tups.
Auchentoul tups.
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