It was good weather for online auctions on Wednesday, October 12 in northern Victoria, reports DANEKA HILL.
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Pepperton Poll Dorset and White Suffolk Stud scraped in right before the bad weather and was quite possibly the last on-property livestock sale in the region before widespread flooding and road closures began the following day.
Buyers were sparse at the in-person sale, but a large contingent of 14 online buyers were bidding aggressively through Elite Livestock Auctions.
It was an online buyer (Mallee Park Poll Dorsets and White Suffolks) who took the top price — twice — paying $5000 a piece for their rams.
The rest of the rams were headed straight to first-cross duties and averaged $1530.
Pepperton’s large shed at Elmore was the star of the show, and thankfully the rain eased off so buyers could hear the auctioneer over the drumming on the roof.
Stud principals Roger and Dianne Trewick said the rain started falling hard the night before and they’d recorded 20mm by 7am.
“It would be a lot more by now,” Dianne said.
“We are expecting a lot of the bidding to be online. There are several rams in the top one per cent for TCP (terminal carcase production) and LEQ (lamb eating quality).
“We’ve been really focusing on LEQ in particular.”
Pepperton Stud is known for its rigorous use of LAMBPLAN data
The rams were kept reasonably dry thanks to a small gravel bank hurriedly constructed by the team to stop water from flowing into the shed.
“It was pouring in,” Roger said.
While busy managing their guests, the animals, the strengthening rain and the complimentary lunch, the Trewicks also found time to throw the next generation in front of the camera for the obligatory owner’s picture.
John Wight came from Bendigo to attend the sale.
“It was pouring rain in Bendigo around 10am,” John said.
“I could hardly see. At one stage I had to stop — the rain was that heavy.
“You couldn’t see the cars in front of you.”
John was in the market for one Poll Dorset ram and ended up buying Lot 14.
James Finnigan from Warrnambool was on the hunt for rams with low birthweight scores, high indexes and high growth weights.
“These will be used across small-framed first-cross ewes,” James said.
“Although I probably shouldn’t admit they are small-framed. Everyone up here seems to have big sheep.”