• Jumping the gun….

    …that’s what the smart folks did at Thistle Hill’s recent Open House.  Advertised for Sunday, we had our first visitors on Friday.  Here, Wooz talks about our breeding program with Dr. Bill Walker of South Carolina, Jim Varnados of Louisiana and Regina Tesnow of Tennessee.  Before the weekend was over, Regina was to sell a bull she had purchased several years ago to Jim and Ronnie Bardwell and then buy a new Thistle Hill bull. Our heifers were a particular hit, the deep ruby red hides are a Thistle Hill trademark and Linda Hendrix and her son, Dr. John Hendrix, would quickly snap up five of our best.  The females will stay…

  • One that got away….

    ….that we should have made sure we collected semen from.  He’s Magic, a Rotokawa 93 son and one of the best bulls we’ve produced here at Thistle Hill.  We love posting pictures of our alumni.  Magic is short, a Frame 1 bull but almost as wide as he is tall…off the charts in linear measurement. Magic originally was sold to Regina and Tom Tesnow of Tomina Farm in Tennessee and fortunately they have now collected his semen.  Just the other day he moved on to Ronnie Bardwell’s farm in Louisiana and, at our open house, the Tesnow’s purchased another Thistle Hill bull, Casino. The line is already forming for Magic semen…

  • Setting a newcomer straight….

    …Right as our open house wrapped up the other day, one of our cows gave birth to a bull calf and that provided wonder (as always) but also a bit of amusement. Within minutes of the birth, another cow with her own calf at side came up to inspect the newcomer.  Understandably, one big red cow looks pretty much like another to a newborn concentrating on standing up, and so junior tried to nurse the wrong one.  It took quite a few strong, but gentle nudges to straighten him out. After a while our son Church realized that we were witnessing a game of “calf ping pong” and got a bit…

  • And now welcome….

    ….our newest calf and his proud mother.  This is one of six heifers that enter our production herd this year.  She’s a Rotokawa 93 daughter. We schedule our heifers to calf at three years of age because we feel that’s better for both mom and her calf.  Other breeders like to push calving earlier, believing they get more calves over the life of the cow by starting at two.  Our experience is that by being patient we extend the productive life of the cow.  But more than that we find they are calmer, better mothers when we wait. Incidentally, the sire in this case was our Rotokawa 974 herd bull,…

  • Why even take a vacation?

    That’s a question I ask myself a lot.  Thistle Hill, Wooz’ family property going back to World War II, could easily be a mountain resort.  This is the view at the main driveway entrance and we hope you’ll turn in the Sunday of the up-coming American Devon Cattle Association meeting. Keep to the left, come up to the house, grab a plate (we’ll even have some of our Tamworth pork sausage for as long as it lasts) and then wander out to the pens and check out our animals.  Some young English Devon will be there…and if you cross the road you can see our brand new traditional pure English…

  • Forget Democrats and Republicans….

    ….vote for the Dinner Party.  Well, in California anyway, where there’s one of those propositions on the ballot which challenges genetically modified foods and the unholy alliance between Big Ag and Big Government.  Michael Pollan recently wrote an article about it in the New York Times magazine.  Here’s the link: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/14/magazine/why-californias-proposition-37-should-matter-to-anyone-who-cares-about-food.html?_r=1

  • The first one….

    …not only our first calf of the season, he’s the first Falcon calf born in this country.  He’s only a few minutes old here, already on his feet and walking; freshly tagged but still wet. Ashott Barton Millennium Falcon was the bull we found on our first trip to Devon and eventually was to become the anchor of Traditional Devon America, a partnership of three breeders sharing a love of Devon cattle and determined to preserve the traditional pure English genetic pool. His real mama is Goldings Snowdrop 113 (British pedigree records go back a long way.)   The mating occurred in a clinic near Cambridge, the embryo frozen and shipped to the…