27/11/06
                 A passion for Suffolk sheep and the social enjoyment pedigree
                   sheep breeding brings has paid off for mother and daughter
                   Glynis and Jane Soulsby after their flock was judged the top
                   in the whole of the north of England.
                  
                   
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                     Glenis and Jane
                       Soulsby and their award winning Suffolk flock 
                     
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                  The Williamsgill Suffolk prefix has existed since
                   1990 when the flock was first established at Williamsgill,
                   Temple Sowerby, near Penrith. 
                 The original flock was beginning to see the fruits of a decade
                   of selective breeding when it was taken in the government’s
                   depopulation cull during 2001’s foot and mouth epidemic. 
                 Jane, aged 24, has a passion for sheep which are involved
                   in her work as a technical sales consultant specialising in
                   animal breeding and genetics with national company Inovis
                   based in Edinburgh. 
                 And it was Jane, an honours graduate in animal science from
                   Newcastle University, who persuaded her mum to re-start the
                   flock the following year. 
                 Now having it selected the top flock in the northern counties
                   branch of the Suffolk Flock Book Society annual contest against
                   opposition from as far afield as Lincolnshire and up to the
                   Scottish Border is the icing on the cake for the pair. 
                 Said Jane: “I gave mum an ultimatum – we have
                   to get some more sheep or you have to find something else
                   to do as she was getting boring!” 
                 Glynis admits: “Through breeding and showing the sheep
                   we had met such a lot of people up and down the country and
                   it had become part of our social calendar.” 
                 Originally the flock was set up through interest from the
                   Soulsby’s son, Thomas, who when he left school took
                   on the job of milking the cows. Thomas and Jane’s elder
                   brother, Peter, also works on the family farm. 
                 The flock was re-established in June 2002 with 24 gimmer
                   shearlings with top bloodlines from Robbie Wilson’s
                   Strathisla flock in Aberdeenshire, although Glynis had planned
                   to re-stock with around half that number. 
                 That year the Strathisla flock went on to win the national
                   Suffolk flock competition and achieved high averages at the
                   Carlisle sale. 
                 It was Jane who suggested they should enter the flock competition
                   last year when they were chosen as reserve top flock and their
                   tup Williamsgill Wkd was judged the best stock ram. He made
                   the flock’s top price to date of 1,000gns 
                 This year judge Helen Goldie who runs the Harpercroft flock
                   at Dundonald, Kilmarnock, placed Williamsgill top of the flocks
                   from around a dozen entries when she visited in mid-October. 
                 “We knew our female gimmers were looking really well
                   and through our breeding programme principally using AI we
                   have bred a more uniform flock,” said Jane. 
                 This year’s females by AI sire Deveronside The Messiah
                   and stock ram Strathisla Red Bull, bought at the 2005 Edinburgh
                   sale, also earned the flock the award for best ewe lambs. 
                 Glynis said: “With the type of Suffolk we have tried
                   to breed we have kept the carcase characteristics without
                   breeding for extra bone and head size which also helps with
                   lambing ease. We have also kept the breed’s colours
                   and good, silky skins on the ewes which is what the commercial
                   breeder wants. 
                 “It is the commercial breeder we are aiming at – they
                   put the money in our pockets – but we would always want
                   to breed something special. 
                 “We have stuck with the Suffolk while some other terminal
                   sires have become popular but I think there is increasing
                   interest again in the breed which achieves a faster liveweight
                   gain – something which proved an advantage during this
                   summer’s lack of rain and poor grass growing season.” 
                 While Jane’s job takes her all over the country and
                   has meant her travelling as far as New Zealand, she always
                   tries to be at shows and sales with her mum to help promote
                   the investment in time and money they have made in the new
                   flock. 
                 She has also used her expertise when the ewes are AId in
                   early August for lambing at the beginning of the following
                   January when she also tries to be at home. 
                 The whole flock is served by AI and the stock ram sweeps
                   up any which have not held to service. 
                 Glynis said: “It’s expensive but it does help
                   batch the sheep both for lambing time and for feeding and
                   marketing. It also means I have a break from getting up through
                   the night to check on the ewes! 
                 “Up to 30 which have held to the AI will lamb over
                   six days then there is a gap before the next cycle of 17 days
                   which allows me to re-charge my batteries. 
                 “Taylor looks at the sheep before bed at midnight and
                   I get up to see to them t around 2.30am. I only bother Taylor
                   if I have a difficult lambing but we get very few. Handling
                   an in-lamb ewe - which can weigh 100kg or more - is a skill
                   in itself. Like everyone who breeds pedigree livestock, we
                   give it 110 per cent.” 
                 The Soulsbys also place great faith in the partners at Penrith’s
                   Rowcliffe House Partnership. 
                 In-lamb ewes are only fed a high energy bucket by Harbro
                   plus a small amount of hard feed closer to lambing time. Afterwards
                   they are fed Taylor’s secret home mix which contains
                   barley grown at Williamsgill as well as oats. 
                 This also introduces the lambs to some hard feed before they
                   get creep around three weeks after birth. 
                 Most of the females are now home-bred with three of the original
                   ewes remaining. All progeny are sold for breeding with fewer
                   females kept as replacements next year as the flock is now
                   at its optimum size. They are sold through sales at Shrewsbury,
                   Skipton and Carlisle. 
                 Rams are generally sold at lambs although this year three have
                 been retained to be sold next year. They are by the flock’s
                 former stock ram Williamsgill Rio Grande by Fordafourie Rio,
                 which the Soulsbys have retained semen from.
                  © Copyright 2006 Jennifer
                    MacKenzie All Rights
            Reserved. 
              Williamsgill Pedigree Suffolk Flock
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