Farmer's Weekly (South Africa)

Frontier Bonsmaras’ strategy for sold-out auctions

Due to its insistence on uncompromi­sing quality, Frontier Bonsmaras in the Eastern Cape has sold every one of the bulls on offer at its annual sales over the past 12 years. Sabrina Dean joined the group on this year’s pre-sale tour to find out how the eve

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The young bull is fresh off the veld but its coat shimmers in the sunlight. Smaller-framed but ticking all the right boxes in terms of performanc­e potential, it puts on a show for the spectators.

As the bull and the crowd size each other up, its breeder, Justin Stirk, shares his insights about the animal to potential buyers.

The bull, DAJ 16 0129, is strutting its stuff during Frontier Bonsmaras’ pre-sale tour a few weeks ahead of the group’s group sale due to take place at the Grahamstow­n Auction Yard on 15 August. It will later be one of two bulls to fetch sale-topping prices of R80 000, with the average for the 58 bulls being more than R47 000.

This is the 12th successive year of this annual event at which every Frontier bull on offer has been sold.

PUSHING FRONTIERS

Frontier Bonsmaras was founded in 2006 by five cattle breeders in and around Grahamstow­n, Bathurst, Port Alfred and Alexandria. Their idea was to add value to their respective operations by combining resources to host a single sale every year, with the emphasis on quality-approved bulls. They partnered with local agent Paul Hobson of Hobson & Co and the agency continues to play an integral role today. The original Frontier group included Glynn Handley and Peter Knott, who were then among the oldest breeders in South Africa. Handley has since died, but his son, Craig, is now a pillar of the group. His bull, GCD 16 0122, tied for the top price of R80 000 at this year’s sale.

The Frontier Bonsmara group comprises four studs: Stirk’s Goodwoods Bonsmaras (DAJ), Brent McNamara’s Winter Castle Bonsmaras (WCB), Andrew van Kerken’s Van Kerken Bonsmaras (AVK), and the Handley operation, GL Handley & Son (GCD).

AWARD WINNERS IN A COMPETITIV­E FIELD

THE BREEDERS HOST A COMBINED ANNUAL SALE OF THEIR VERY FINEST BULLS

Adding value to a Bonsmara stud operation is not easy. Even if you do everything by the book, you are in a large pool of topquality fellow breeders across the country. Notwithsta­nding this, McNamara was the recipient of the Agricultur­al Research Council’s 2015 Award for Most Improved Herd of the Year. And recently, Stirk netted the 2018 South African Stud Book Elite Award for Beef Cattle Herd of the Year.

Frontier Bonsmaras has built a solid reputation for quality animals, and one of its broader goals is to see the cattle bred by its members go on to improve the quality of herds in the region and further afield.

Stirk stresses that their aim is to ensure that every buyer walks away with a bull that he or she is

highly satisfied with, or at least a bull that can be put to good use.

“The last thing we want is people going away with a bull they didn’t want that’s not going to do them well.”

AN IDEAL OPPORTUNIT­Y TO EVALUATE THE BULLS

The pre-sale tour, which stops off at each of the five breeders’ farms, is one way the members are trying to add value to their respective enterprise­s.

By hosting the tour, they give prospectiv­e buyers an opportunit­y to get a feel for the livestock on offer, the area in which they were bred, and their performanc­e to date. There is also the chance, of course, to see the bulls in their element at home.

The sellers in turn can gauge the requiremen­ts of commercial beef farmers. They also use the occasion to share more informatio­n about the animals and advise prospectiv­e buyers on how the bull can best be utilised in a herd, such as being put to heifers rather than cows.

HARDY CATTLE

One of Frontier Bonsmaras’ key selling points is the hardiness of its stock. Because the area is tick-infested, the cattle are exposed to heartwater, Asiatic and African redwater, and gallsickne­ss (anaplasmos­is).

This gives rise to strong, resistant livestock that can be relocated virtually anywhere else in the country and still thrive.

THE GROUP OFFERS TRAINING TO NEW CATTLE FARMERS

These elements, combined with the non-negotiable approach to quality, are part of the formula that has helped the Frontier breeders maintain their 100% sale record for more than a decade.

All five breeders are registered with SA Stud Book and conform to breeding and performanc­e recording requiremen­ts. Every bull is screened ahead of the sale to provide guarantees in terms of health status, and will also have been approved by qualified breed selectors.

Stirk says they are strict on the quality of animals marketed under the brand. “One of our golden rules is that if the quality is no good, it doesn’t go on sale.”

They also do not allow sales directly off the farm.

The only exception is if there are government contracts and tenders in the offing, in which case surplus bulls are sold through Hobson & Co.

Apart from observing this quality prerequisi­te and a few other mutually agreed-upon rules, each breeder in the group is free to pursue his own breeding goals. There are no restrictio­ns in terms of type, allowing each to stay true to his own style.

The members do not share bulls; the only exception to this is when a specific bull can add value to an individual breeding objective. This approach helps increase the diversity of the approximat­ely 60 bulls on

offer each year. “It’s a huge genetic pool,” says Stirk.

The breeders neverthele­ss collaborat­e to achieve a shared goal or pool their collective knowledge. They also call on each other regularly for advice.

By joining forces, the four stud breeders have been able to ensure consistent­ly good prices for their animals while creating a trusted brand to ensure long-term sustainabi­lity of their businesses.

SUPPORTING COMMERCIAL AND EMERGING FARMERS

Frontier Bonsmaras has invested in improving cattle in the region by providing good-quality genetics, both male and female, to commercial farmers. In addition, former customers are occasional­ly allowed to offer approved cattle as guest sellers.

Frontier Bonsmaras also reaches out to new or emerging cattle farmers through an award-winning developmen­t project, for which Stirk was earlier this year named the SA Stud Book Farmer’s Weekly Mentor Breeder of the Year.

Stirk says that too many farmers listen to the divisive rhetoric spewed out by politician­s but do not play their part in upliftment.

“We decided that we have to be at coalface of this thing if we’re going to turn it around.”

Frontier Bonsmaras started by providing formal training to a group of about 40 participan­ts last year. The training consists of modules on selection criteria, herd health, herd management, grazing and nutrition, finance and marketing.

According to Stirk, their ultimate goal is to obtain enough funding to appoint a full-time facilitato­r who will not only seek out suitable participan­ts, but serve as a type of extension officer.

“What we actually need is funding of R1 million a year to employ someone who can go out in between these courses to visit these guys on their farms to see if they’re implementi­ng what they learn,” he says. He adds that the group is also keen to start exploring some of the developmen­t initiative­s pioneered by Bonsmara industry heavyweigh­t Nick Serfontein of the Sernick Group. This could include, for example, buying calves from new farmers involved in the training, swopping calves for a bull, or helping a group of farmers put together enough calves for them to send a truckload to a large feedlot.

He says that up to 60% of the cattle in the province are owned by new or emerging farmers in the former homeland areas. Many of the animals are traded on informal markets, where farmers who are inexperien­ced or simply desperate for cash often get taken advantage of.

Stirk is hopeful that their teaching and mentoring will help new entrants to the beef industry become more successful, thereby helping to address transforma­tion and ultimately benefittin­g the industry as a whole.

• Phone Justin Stirk on 082 662 5901.

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 ??  ?? TOP LEFT:Head stockman at Justin Stirk’s Goodwoods Bonsmaras, Mariri Breakfast, sends the next lot on the catalogue into the show camp so that Stirk can tell prospectiv­e buyers more about the bull, its performanc­e to date, and its recommende­d use.ABOVE:Breeder Justin Stirk discusses the bulls he has put on offer at the annual Frontier Bonsmaras group during a pre-sale tour held a few weeks prior to the actual sale. Standing at the fence, from left, are prospectiv­e buyers Adrian Reed, Greg Reed and Desmond Steti.LEFT:One of the highlights of a pre-sale tour is the opportunit­y to see the bulls in their natural element. Here some of Stirk’s bulls fight for dominance before being brought into the show camp.
TOP LEFT:Head stockman at Justin Stirk’s Goodwoods Bonsmaras, Mariri Breakfast, sends the next lot on the catalogue into the show camp so that Stirk can tell prospectiv­e buyers more about the bull, its performanc­e to date, and its recommende­d use.ABOVE:Breeder Justin Stirk discusses the bulls he has put on offer at the annual Frontier Bonsmaras group during a pre-sale tour held a few weeks prior to the actual sale. Standing at the fence, from left, are prospectiv­e buyers Adrian Reed, Greg Reed and Desmond Steti.LEFT:One of the highlights of a pre-sale tour is the opportunit­y to see the bulls in their natural element. Here some of Stirk’s bulls fight for dominance before being brought into the show camp.
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 ??  ?? ABOVE LEFT:Three of Frontier Bonsmaras’ breeders (from left): Andrew van Kerken, Justin Stirk and Craig Handley, with Archie the dog. The fourth breeder in the group, Brent McNamara, was not present.ABOVE:The 58 bulls on offer at this year’s sale were sold for an average price of more than R47 000. This is the 12th year running that all bulls on offer have been sold.
ABOVE LEFT:Three of Frontier Bonsmaras’ breeders (from left): Andrew van Kerken, Justin Stirk and Craig Handley, with Archie the dog. The fourth breeder in the group, Brent McNamara, was not present.ABOVE:The 58 bulls on offer at this year’s sale were sold for an average price of more than R47 000. This is the 12th year running that all bulls on offer have been sold.
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 ??  ?? ABOVE RIGHT:Due to the ongoing drought, Craig Handley chose to reduce herd numbers by selling a number of older stud cows at this year’s auction. Although disappoint­ed, he said it was better to share the good genetics with other farmers than potentiall­y having to cull the animals later due to shortage of feed. Fifteen older in-calf cows sold for an average of well over R22 000, with the top-priced cow fetching R50 000.
ABOVE RIGHT:Due to the ongoing drought, Craig Handley chose to reduce herd numbers by selling a number of older stud cows at this year’s auction. Although disappoint­ed, he said it was better to share the good genetics with other farmers than potentiall­y having to cull the animals later due to shortage of feed. Fifteen older in-calf cows sold for an average of well over R22 000, with the top-priced cow fetching R50 000.

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