The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Audrey well positioned to continue dad’s legacy

Panmure-prefixed cattle bound for Ingliston

- Philippa Merry

For many livestock and equestrian families, the Royal Highland Show is not simply a tradition – it’s an institutio­n.

It’s just such an indescriba­bly natural part of their life that will very rarely, if indeed ever, be missed.

And that’s certainly the case for cattle breeders JM Cant and Partners, who have produced pedigree livestock under the Panmure prefix outside the small village of Arbirlot, near Arbroath, for the last 50 years.

“I’ve been showing at the Highland for as long as I can actually remember; certainly since I was in my early teens,” said Audrey Anderson, who has taken over at the helm of Easter Knox Farm following the loss of her father Alex last year.

“It meant a lot to dad – he showed and judged there throughout his farming career. I can’t actually think of a single year that we wouldn’t have been there,” she added.

“It’s hard to put a finger on what exactly makes it so special – it just is.”

Hereford cattle were originally added to a fold of commercial cattle at Easter Knox, which had formed part of the wider Panmure Estate, back in the late 1960s. And, although the move was actually instigated on somewhat of a whim by Audrey’s mother Jessie, who took a fancy to the attractive looks and nature of the native breed, the cattle quickly became a lifelong love for Alex.

He establishe­d the herd with a handful of select purchases, not least Cheviot Lilac, Lily, Plum and Blessing, from Dennis Wilson, at Primside Mill, Kelso, and in doing so ensured the family business of JM Cant and Partners quickly became synonymous with success in the breed.

Cheviot Lily ultimately progressed to stand champion at Angus Show on no less than five successive occasions and on these solid foundation­s, the Panmure name has never yet looked back in the Hereford show ring.

“Despite years of success across the Hereford section, with junior, female, male, pairs and even reserve champion wins, the overall breed title at the Royal Highland actually proved elusive to us for many years,” said Audrey.

“It wasn’t until 2006 that we finally went all the way and took the overall Hereford championsh­ip – and I think everyone was taken aback a little that it was our first breed supreme at Ingliston. Everyone assumed we had won it plenty of times previously.”

That year, Alex and Audrey’s title holder was stockbull Solpoll 1 Brigadier, which they had purchased from current Northern Ireland Hereford Breeders Associatio­n chairman John Mcmordie, of Solitude Farm, Ballygowan, Newtownard­s.

“We’re a closed herd, so the only animals we buy in are stockbulls. We go to Hereford in April and October to buy and sell, but only breed our own females,” said Audrey, who took over the management of the Panmure pedigree cattle during that momentous 2006 season, which culminated in the family winning UK Hereford Herd of the Year.

During Alex’s earliest foray into the Hereford breed, he bucked the then ‘fashionabl­e’ trend of smaller females in favour of heifers with more scale and bone and, according to Audrey, this decision has since stood them in very good stead.

She said she has continued to breed for stronger, modern and ultimately more commercial cattle, all while retaining the docile nature for which the breed is famed.

Audrey has scaled back numbers to a 16-head of cows plus followers, allowing her to cope during the times her husband Neil is offshore for work.

“I breed for size and shape. I guess you could say that I want it all,” said Audrey.

“But I like my cows to have bone and be powerful, to walk well with good locomotion.”

Both Audrey and daughter Abbie, a third-year veterinary student at Edinburgh University, who helps out with the show team during breaks from her studies, confessed they actually prefer to show bulls – finding themselves far pickier about their females.

Despite years of success across the Hereford section, the overall breed title at the Royal Highland actually proved ellusive for many years. AUDREY ANDERSON

However, when a really good heifer comes along, they both get all the more excited.

As a result, it was the family’s most recent Highland win, with Panmure 1 Blessing G6, in 2014, that carries the most significan­ce and meaning.

“That was the first occasion that we lifted the breed title with one of our home-bred Panmure females,” said Audrey.

“It was an incredibly nostalgic feeling.”

The four-and-a-half-year-old cow, sired by Romany 1 Distiller, which was shown with her twin November-born calves at foot, also progressed to stand champion at the Hereford breed’s Scottish National Show, staged at Kelso, later that same year.

“We always have a lot of fun at the show and we’ve met a lot of friends there over the years.

“Winning is the icing on the cake, but we’d never miss showing at Ingliston even if we don’t feel we have the strongest of teams,” said Audrey.

At last year’s Royal Highland, Audrey and Abbie achieved an impressive haul of tickets across both the Hereford and Charolais show rings.

Panmure 1 Plum L7 stood reserve breed champion, best female and, when joined by Panmure 1 Plum L8, lifted the best pair trophy, while Panmure 1 Mumford won rosettes as the reserve bull champion, best junior bull and best overall junior.

Meanwhile, in the Charolais section, Abbie topped the two-year-old class and went on to win reserve junior female with her own heifer Edenhurst Joujou.

Although JM Cant and Partners have had Charolais under the Panmure prefix since the 1990s and have shown them at the Highland since 2011, it is only Audrey and Abbie’s Hereford show team that will make the trip to Ingliston this year.

They have a six-strong squad entered to contest the event, adjudicate­d by Alistair Smith, from Nottingham­shire, who is the stockman for the Livesey Brothers’ Normanton herd.

Their 2017 hopes will rest upon offspring from the Panmure Plum and Blessing bloodlines.

“We can’t pretend we aren’t competitiv­e when it comes to showing,” said Audrey.

“Everyone likes to win, but the Highland is just as much a holiday and special social occasion with friends and we look forward to it every year.”

 ?? Pictures: Ron Stephen. ?? Abbie and Audrey Anderson, at home with their Panmure herd.
Pictures: Ron Stephen. Abbie and Audrey Anderson, at home with their Panmure herd.
 ??  ?? Animals from the Panmure herd of Herefords.
Animals from the Panmure herd of Herefords.
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 ?? Picture: Robert Smith. ?? Highland champion Panmure 1 Blessing G6.
Picture: Robert Smith. Highland champion Panmure 1 Blessing G6.

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