VICTORIAN wool and ram producer Nathan Anderson is the lucky winner of Sheep Central’s iPad reader prize, drawn yesterday.
Nathan automatically went into the draw for the iPad when he took a free subscription to receive Sheep Central’s regular email news alerts.
Thousands of wool producers, lamb producers and other stakeholders across both industries now receive Sheep Central’s regular news alerts and regularly visit the website, coordinated by editor, Terry Sim out of Sheep Central’s headquarters near Hamilton in Victoria.
Nathan with his wife Kirstie manage for the Henderson family, the Avington Merino and Poll Merino studs and a commercial fine wool enterprise on their property of the same name near Sidonia, not far from Kyneton in Central Victoria.
The Merino stud was registered in 1998 and is based on bloodlines from Merryville, Glenara, Beverley, and The Grange studs. The Poll Merino Stud was registered in 2000 and is based on Lorelmo, Cromarty and The Grange bloodlines.
To increase the quality of the ewe base an extensive ET & AI program has been carried out over the last decade.
Ewes are tested and classed annually and indexed. Stud sires need to excel under strict selection indexes and have been benchmarked in the show ring among the best in the country. The results of our breeding programme to date show that we have been successful in combining visual appraisal with performance recording.
Mr Anderson said Avington’s aim was to produce large-framed superfine sheep with strong constitutions and soft, loose, pliable skins. Fleece weight and micron are key selection criteria but staple strength, length, low CV, crimp definition and nourishment are extremely important in our selection process.
At shearing in November, a laserscan machine is used to test all fleeces and a specialist classer is used to class the fleeces and make up bales in half micron lots. The top price for Avington wool was 6500c/kg in 2014.
The average micron at the last shearing was 15.8 and average fleece weight 5.2 kg for adult sheep.
The total number of sheep run under the business is currently around 12,250. Additional land was purchased in 2009, 2010 and 2014 and stock numbers are expected to increase to 20,000 in the next three years.
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