07/11/07 
            David and Sally Dixon are among those dedicated hill farmers who
              are focused on continually improving flock output and exploiting
            the market place to ensure a sustainable business. 
            
            
            
             
             
             David Dixon with his Hampshire Down cross lambs and  
             Texel cross ewes.
  
              
              
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            Last season they swapped a continental terminal sire for the Hampshire
              Down to put over a portion of their Texel cross Mule flock enabling
              them to finish lambs to target weight up to four weeks sooner and
            command a premium price from the earlier market. 
            “We decided we could improve returns by extending our finished
              lamb marketing period to take advantage of the earlier higher prices,” David
              said. 
            “Historically an 18kg deadweight lamb sold in June to average
              between £8 and £10 a head more than one marketed four
              weeks later. Therefore, we wanted to finish our lambs faster, and
              hit the market at least one month sooner. 
            “Lambing any earlier than our traditional March date was
              out of the question because of lack of grass at that time of year
              and the additional cost of required inputs would far outweigh the
              benefits,” says David who together with Sally manages a 1,200
              ewe enterprise comprising a mix of Swaledales, Mules and Texel
              cross Mules at Hartley Castle, Hartley, near Kirkby Stephen, a
              550 acre Cumbrian hill unit with accompanying moorland grazing. 
            “So we turned to exploring the different genetics available.
              We agreed if we were to introduce a new breed to the flock, then
              it had to be one that was easy to manage.”  
            David was among the first sheep producers in the region to introduce
              the Texel as a terminal sire back in the 1980s. 
            “I’m never afraid to try something different which
              I believe to have a future,” he says. “We’d read
              that the modern Hampshire Down was a terminal sire which had the
              genetic potential to deliver just what we were looking for, so
              we invested in a ram and have since found it has ticked all the
              boxes.” 
            The Dixons put the Hampshire Down over a portion of their March
              lambing flock of Texel cross Mules to achieve 180% lambs reared. “Firstly,
              the lambs were easy to lamb out of shearling ewes; no assistance
              was required, they just fell out. 
            “Then they proved to be very active, these lambs were up
              and away sucking immediately. They were born with fine skins and
              were turned out within their first 48 hours and since then they
              have continued to grow away without any checks.”  
            Overall, the Hampshire Down cross lambs are finishing between
              four to six weeks faster than their Continental cross counterparts
              on the Cumbrian unit. The first batch reached 40kg target finishing
              liveweight at 12 weeks solely off milk and grass. 
            “I think they did particularly well at a time when the farm
              is very tight for grass. We expect the remainder to be finished
              without any form of supplement within 16 to18 weeks of age,” he
              explains. “We sold the first two batches through the local
              ring, and one of the buyers, a local butcher told us the lambs
              killed out at an average 54%. 
            Apart from selling into a stronger market, David Dixon says that
              finishing lambs earlier has brought cost savings and allowed more
              grass for the remaining lambs to finish on.  
            To the future, and David believes family run hill units like Hartley
              Castle with its moorland grazing rights will require continued
              support for them to remain viable. “There is only so much
              we can do as farmers to improve our efficiency and improve market
              returns. 
            “For example, better use of minerals and trace elements
              together with improved grassland management during last 8-10 years
              is now enabling 85% of lambs to reach their finished target weight
              off grass, while the Mule flock is now consistently achieving 200%
              lambs reared per ewe.  
            “More recently we have joined various environmental schemes
              and cut back ewe numbers to a more manageable flock size enabling
              us to reduced input costs. We’re also a member of Swalex
              Ltd, a group of four local farmers established to develop added
              value export markets for the UK’s stratified sheep breeds.” 
            He adds: “Introducing the Hampshire Down is the latest tool
              to the armoury helping us produce added value finished lamb, more
              efficiently.” 
            
			
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