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

Records smashed at buoyant auction

- LYNSEY CLARK

Breed records were smashed at the annual Dalmally Blackface ram sale on Saturday, when a ram lamb from the Dalchirla flock at Muthill, Crieff, soared to £ 200,000 – surpassing the previous top of £ 160,000, also set by Dalchirla, five years ago.

The sale – this year held at United Auctions’ ( UA) Stirling Mart, to allow for social distancing – saw 21 lots make five-figure prices, with a total of 570 rams sold. Overall, 418 shearling rams averaged £ 1, 319, while 152 ram lambs averaged £3,426.

UA managing director George Purves said: “I think it was as good a show of tups as we’ve ever had at the Dalmally sale and the trade reflected that of the whole sheep industry just now – buoyant.

“Both buyers and sellers were delighted to be able to have a sale amidst the current pandemic, and we’ ve had stringent protocols in place from day one to ensure that continues, while protecting our staff and customers.”

T he atmosphere was certainly far quieter than normal, but there was still much pre-sale talk from a distance about the Dalchirla consignmen­t from Ian Hunter’s 1,200ewe flock at Muthill, which is often star attraction at Dalmally.

They did not disappoint, with the 26 lots from Mr Hunter selling to average an incredible £15,444.

The ram lamb pen leader, sired by a home-bred son of Dalchirla Boris and out of a ewe by a £24,000 Connachan, proved the most popular and was sought after by a number of top breeders.

As a result, the winning syndicate – the Campbells of Glenrath, Peebles; the MacGregors of Allanfauld, Kilsyth and the Wights of Midlock, Crawford – had to go to £200,000 to secure their ram of choice.

They each pay £50,000, with Dalchirla retaining a quarter share to allow them to use him in their own flock.

From the same pen, Mary McCall Smith, Connachan, Crieff;D avid Murray, Lurgan, Aberfeldy; and Aberuchill Estate, Comrie, teamed up to buy a son of a £ 45,000 Nunnerie, for £40,000.

At £ 38,000, the Kay family, Gass, Straiton; David Morrison, Dalwyne, Barr, and John and Patrick Harkin, Loughash, Strabane, secured one by a home-bred son of a £24,000 Connachan.

Other leading lamb prices from Dalchirla included £21,000, £15,000 and £14,000, while shearlings from the flock sold to £22,000, for one the same way bred as the £200,000 lamb.

It joins the Barclays’ Harestone flock at Insch, with one at £16,000, by a £24,000 Connachan, selling in a three-way split to the Campbells of Drimsynie, Argyll; Andrew Campbell, Highland Livestock, Fort William; and Ewen Macmillan, Lurg, Fintry.

The top shearling price was £ 30,000, from the MacGregors, Dyke, Milton of Campsie. By a £38,000 Dyke, which sold last year as a shearling, he sold to John Murray, Crossflatt, Muirkirk, and the Cullens, Dollarbank, Dollar.

The Barclays also bought a third share of a £25,000 Midlock shearling for their Harestone flock, with the remaining two-thirds going to Billy Renwick, Blackhouse, Yarrow, and Burn castle Farming, Lauder.

Other shearlings sold to £ 22,000 from Lurg, and Stephen Duncan’s Livet consignmen­t from Glenlivet, peaked at £10,000, with his shearling son of a £2,800 Dalchirla selling to three Northumber­land-based buyers.

 ?? Picture courtesy of MacGregor Photograph­y. ?? ON TOP: A Blackface record £200,000 was paid for this Dalchirla ram lamb.
Picture courtesy of MacGregor Photograph­y. ON TOP: A Blackface record £200,000 was paid for this Dalchirla ram lamb.

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