The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Aberdeen-Angus still breed for

- BY EDDIE GILLANDERS

The modern Aberdeen-Angus can compete on performanc­e with any of the Continenta­l breeds, and the premium for finished cattle makes them more profitable, according to leading finisher Ian Emslie, Little Barras, Laurenceki­rk.

Mr Emslie has stuck by the AberdeenAn­gus through good times and bad for 50 years and now with his wife, Margaret, and son John finishes 2,350 head a year – mostly heifers – to Scotbeef, Bridge of Allan for Marks and Spencer.

The cattle earn a premium of 30-35p a kg deadweight but this can sometimes be as high as 40p.

He will be in his usual place at the ringside at Thainstone Centre on Tuesday when Aberdeen and Northern Marts hope to have 600-700 AberdeenAn­gus on offer at their annual autumn show and sale of native breeds store cattle. “We finish mostly heifers and the Aberdeen-Angus heifer of today is a different propositio­n to the AberdeenAn­gus

“No point holding on to any cattle which are not performing”

of 50 years ago,” said Ian. “The breed has changed completely. Heifers no longer become overfat before reaching an economic slaughter weight as they used to. We are finishing heifers today at around 600kg liveweight compared with 450kg at the same age in the old days.”

The Emslies scour the whole of Scotland for Aberdeen-Angus heifers, buying stores from marts up and down the country and direct by private treaty from regular suppliers. Many come from Orkney and Mr Emslie can be found at the ringside at Kirkwall Mart most Mondays at this time of year, as well as Thainstone on a Friday.

Cattle are batched on arrival on the farm and maintained in the same batch on an “all in, all out” system.

An average of 40 cattle a week are sent to Scotbeef throughout the year but over the next two weeks 80 cattle a week will go with a large batch due to finish.

“We market the whole batch at the same time as there is no point holding on to any cattle which are not performing as they won’t improve with age,” said Ian.

Heifers are fast finished over 70 to 100 days, although smaller cattle going to grass may be on the farm for up to 200 days. Average deadweight is 320kg and most grade R for conformati­on although more are achieving U grade these days.

“Weights tend to be variable but the abattoir is prepared to accept this as we aim to market the cattle at the right degree of finish,” said Ian.

“Scotbeef like cattle with more finish and this makes for better eating quality which is what Marks and Spencer are looking for.”

Other abattoirs are encouragin­g farmers to reduce the maximum weight of finished cattle by penalising carcases over 400kg. This doesn’t affect the Emslies with their Aberdeen-Angus but they also finish another 1,700 Continenta­l cross cattle which Mr Emslie reckons are failing to reach the right grade for conformati­on because of the weight restrictio­n.

“It’s all wrong because it means the eating quality of the beef is less than optimum,” said Ian.

A feature of the beef operation at Barras is the low-cost finishing system which is based on grass during the summer and a winter diet of homegrown barley and wheat and bought-in byproducts such as brock potatoes, turnips, carrots and parsnips which are crushed and mixed with draff. No silage is made on the 150 acres of grass, although is sometimes bought if the price is right, and neither minerals nor concentrat­es are fed.

Waste vegetables are bought from regular suppliers and during the winter

“We aim to market the cattle at the right degree of finish”

200 tonnes of potatoes and 100 tonnes of carrots are required each week.

John said: “The cattle generally have the frames on them when we buy them as stores and don’t need a high-protein diet to finish. They get all the trace elements they need from the soil on the vegetables.”

Arable cropping comprises 300 acres of barley and wheat, all of which is fed on the farm. The cattle provide an abundance of muck for the arable cropping and minimises the need for artificial fertiliser. One 150-acre field has been in continuous wheat for 17 years and has received no compound fertiliser, only farmyard manure (FYM). Surplus FYM is traded for straw with neighbours.

Margaret said: “Everything we sell off the farm goes on four legs.”

The whole operation is run by Ian who looks after the buying, spending much of his week at marts, and John, who runs the farm and is responsibl­e for the marketing of the stock but also

 ??  ?? ABERDEEN-ANGUS ENTHUSIAST­S: The team at Little Barras – Ian and Margaret Emslie with son John
ABERDEEN-ANGUS ENTHUSIAST­S: The team at Little Barras – Ian and Margaret Emslie with son John
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