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WAMMCO award to Corrigin breeders

The West Australian

Two branches and several generations of Corrigin's Poultney family have combined many years of sheepbreeding experience in a SAMM/Dohne/Merino prime lamb partnership that has won WAMMCO's Producer of the Month award for March 2015.

Ross Poultney, who left full-time farming two years ago to expand his Solar Water Pump Sales and Service business in Perth, has teamed up with his brother Harold's sons Andrew and Craig and their young families to extend a successful cropping, prime lamb/wether/wool business.

Andrew and Craig sharefarm Ross' 2900ha Corrigin property under an agreement that includes his SAMM/Dohne /Merino ewes and rams.

The joint prime lamb operation now involves about 2000 ewes.

The winning Producer of the Month consignment consisted of 157 lambs that were processed at Katanning on March 6 and averaged 22.1kg to return $119.94, including skins.

The Poultney brothers said they were pleased almost 64 per cent met WAMMCO Select specifications, with individual lambs reaching a top of $146 per head.

Despite an excellent cropping season later lamb drafts, including the WAMMCO award winners, were finished on a lupin/hay mix via self feeders, when stubbles shut off early.

"We take a close interest in the processing feedback from WAMMCO, and would welcome the return of an expanded WAMMCO Select accreditation incorporating taste, tenderness and other characteristics," Craig said.

Harold Poultney shared an early interest in dual purpose Merinos through his membership of the Australian Merino Society and its later Performance Bred extension, and his sons have maintained an interest in Merinos.

Ross Poultney left the original family farming enterprise in 1989, shifting his Merino focus to the Bolt family's Claypans stud at Corrigin.

Ongoing depression in the wool market and brighter prospects for lamb and shipping wethers tempted him to purchase five South African Meat Merino rams at the Northam ram sale in the late 1990s, with two more from Peter Jensen at Pingaring in 2010.

Doehne ewes were added to the mix in 2011.

SAMM rams bred from this base and classed mainly on size enabled him to produce up to F4 SAMM/Merinos, but he still buys in Claypans blood ewes for their size and wool.

Andrew and Craig have no plans to expand the sheep operation.

They believe the prime lamb side of the business is optimised at around 2000 ewes, fitting well with their enterprise ratio of 60 per cent cropping and 40 per cent sheep.

They have an ongoing policy to maintain a good clover/medic base in pasture paddocks kept for lambing and weaning.

With an average 100 per cent annual lambing the partnership has been sending most of its prime lambs to WAMMCO at Katanning, with consignments and bookings weighed and arranged by Tony Douglass of Elders Corrigin.

They aim to sell their annual lamb crop at a minimum of $100 a head, and, if necessary, will risk higher holding costs to keep lambs back.

The family holds WAMMCO shares to secure its processing entitlements at Katanning and welcomed the co-operative's record rebate in October last year.

Andrew's wife Emma and their children Taj and Paige were on site to help with the crutching of wether lambs last week.

Craig and his wife Georgie have a four-month-old daughter Sophie.

Good opening rains and follow-up last week have set early hopes for another good season in area.

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