Archive for Butlerview Farm

A $900,000 Cow and What She Tells Us: Inside the Parade of Perfection Sale

A Delta-Lambda daughter just brought $900,000 at Butlerview Farm, and that number is going to get quoted in every coffee-shop conversation in the show world for the next six months. Fair enough — it’s a stunning result. But if you breed pedigree cattle for a living, the $900,000 isn’t the interesting part. The interesting part is everything that happened underneath it.

West-Adub Lambda Sadie, the 2025 All-American AND All-Canadian Junior 3-Year-Old, just sold for a staggering $900,000 to West Coast Holsteins and Butler View Farms in partnership

The Parade of Perfection closed at a $3,915,650 gross, with 169 live lots averaging $21,526 and a 26-cow Elite Embryo Sale averaging $3,402 per embryo to open the day. Strong numbers, smoothly run, deep type throughout. Jeff Butler hosting, Brian Carscadden and Kathleen O’Keef on the mic for the parade, Ryan Krohlow and Tim Abbott calling the embryo sale, pedigrees by Roger Turner and Tim Abbott — this was a polished, top-of-the-market event. But “strong average” and “healthy market” are not the same sentence, and the gap between them is where the real read on this sale lives.

The headline: West-Adub Lambda Sadie, $900,000

West-Adub Lambda Sadie VG-89-CAN — the All-American and All-Canadian Junior 3-Year-Old of 2025, sold for $900,000 as Lot 1 at the Parade of Perfection, with Westcoast Holsteins retaining a half-interest. 

Lot 1 was West-Adub Lambda Sadie VG-89-CAN — though as O’Keef noted in the parade, she’s actually scored 89-3-yr-old, a max score for her age in Canada. She’s the All-American and All-Canadian Junior 3-Year-Old of 2025, and she sold to Butlerview Farm with consignor Westcoast Holsteins of Chilliwack, BC retaining half-interest.

You already know her show résumé, so let’s talk about why she’s worth three-quarters of a million more than any other cow in the barn. Sadie is a Delta-Lambda out of Winright Sidekick Salsa, whose maternal line runs through Budjon-JK Gold Chip Ellen EX-91 and on back through Budjon-JK Linjet Eileen EX-96 to Krull-Broker Elegance EX-96-USA 3E — and that Elegance tap root is the engine here. As they put it on the block, “there’s nothing you’d change about the pedigree.” Elegance isn’t a pedigree line, she’s a franchise — a documented producing matriarch with a proven track record of throwing salable daughters generation after generation. The Amplify Sale already showed the family’s commercial depth this spring, when a junior 2-year-old Architect daughter out of Sadie topped that event at $63,000.

The buyer isn’t paying for a trophy — Butler called her “one of the most accomplished, greatest individuals to probably ever sell at public auction,” and the cattle people in the tent know exactly what that pedigree throws. What makes the math work is the producing side. She’s due in roughly 60 days in terrific shape, and Lot 1A — first-choice female by Salute out of Sadie — already sold separately for $27,000 before she’d produced a thing under new ownership. At $900,000 you are not buying a cow; you’re buying a flush schedule. Whether the number pencils depends entirely on how many $25,000-to-$60,000 daughters and how many five-figure embryo packages come out the back end over the next decade. The cow is the asset; the genetics are the cash flow. Anyone evaluating this purchase as “what’s a show cow worth” is asking the wrong question.

Worth naming the structure, too, because Butler spelled it out from the block: Westcoast offered to retain 50%, but the buyer could take 50% or 100% — “buyer’s call.” Westcoast didn’t have to sell Sadie outright — they recapitalized her and kept the option to hold half the upside. That’s the smart-money play at this level. You pull cash off the table, de-risk the single-animal exposure, and still own half of every flush. It’s the same logic a founder uses taking secondary while keeping equity. The breeders treating these elite donors purely as trophies are the ones who get hurt; the ones treating them as a balance-sheet position are the ones writing the half-interest deals. And note Carscadden’s tell on where she goes next: “We can’t wait to see her on the colored shavings again this fall.” At $900,000, she still has to go win — the asset and the show string are the same animal.

The second tier told the real story

Here’s where it gets honest. After Sadie, the air gets thin in a hurry at the top — and the buyers who knew what they were doing went and got the cows that were actually ready to win now.

JM Valley Sidekick Jacuzzi EX-95 — Grand Champion of the 2026 Quebec Spring Show and a finished, scored show cow — sold as Lot 3 for $195,000 to Elmvue Farm, the second-high seller of the Parade of Perfection.

Lot 3 — JM Valley Sidekick Jacuzzi EX-95 — $195,000 — Elmvue Farm, Johnstown, NY. This is arguably the sharpest buy in the barn. Grand Champion of the 2026 Quebec Spring Show in April, scored EX-95 in May, sold in June — that’s a finished, scored, freight-train of a show cow with no projection required. Carscadden’s read says it all: “Anyone that judges a show anywhere in the world, you see this cow coming at you, she commands your attention.” Butler called her “one of the best cows we’ve ever had the privilege of selling at any of our auctions.” Elmvue didn’t pay for potential; they paid for a banner-ready aged cow they can lead into colored shavings this fall and breed afterward. The reliability is already on the page.

Millen Lambda Amelia VG-88-CAN — Intermediate Champion at the 2026 Quebec Spring Show and, in Jeff Butler’s words, “the strongest of contenders” for the junior three-year-old class at World Dairy Expo — sold as Lot 5 for $150,000, the second of Elmvue Farm’s two top buys.

Lot 5 — Millen Lambda Amelia VG-88-CAN — $150,000 — also Elmvue Farm. Elmvue went $345,000 deep across two lots and built a genuine show string in an afternoon — and notice they did it with another Delta-Lambda daughter. The intermediate champion to Jacuzzi’s grand at Quebec, Amelia drew the strongest call of the day: Butler flatly named her “a leading contender to win the junior three-year-old class at World Dairy Expo… the strongest of contenders,” and Carscadden backed him — “I sure hate to try and find one to beat her right now.” Two of the top three live lots, Sadie and Amelia, are Lambda daughters. That’s not a coincidence; that’s the sire writing the type model for this generation of show Holsteins.

Then the next rung, all of which a serious pedigree buyer should have in their notebook:

  • Lots 8 & 8A — Fleury Lambda Beast / Eastdale Lambda Beast — $135,000 each (Lambda again). Beast won the spring two-year-old at both the Quebec Spring Show and Madison’s Midwest Spring National. Carscadden called her “arguably one of my favorite young cows that Simone and I have ever sold,” and Butler said outright, “She reminds me of Sadie. She keeps getting better every day.” 8A (East-River Lambda Briefless, the reserve intermediate at the Atlantic show) was an added lot sold on choice — and out of the Goldwyn Brittany / High Octane Babe family, the same tap root feeding much of this sale.
  • Lot 29 — GenoSource Double Dice-ET — $85,000. Hold this one — it’s the whole thesis in a single lot, below.
  • Lot 6 — Sandpiper Sidekick Disco VG-89 — $74,000. The 2025 All-American Winter 2-Year-Old, third at Madison. Butler: “I think she’s a cow that can be grand champion at Madison one day.”
  • Lots 9 & 10 — Ms Milksource Sincerly / Signature, full ET sisters — $73,000 each. Tattoo daughters of the late Glenirvine Unix Sally EX-96, an All-American and All-Canadian who also milked over 50,000 lbs. Carscadden called Sincerly “a franchise young cow” off a “tremendous, famous dam.” That word again.

Lot 29 is the entire sale in one cow

GenoSource Double Dice-ET — the Drop-Docs daughter of Lady-Rose Caught-Your-Eye that Jeff Butler called “the biggest money maker in the sale,” sold as Lot 29 for $85,000 with 26 IVF embryos included. “You throw the word franchise around a lot,” said Brian Carscadden. “This is a franchise kind of cow.” Photo: Liz Sullivan.

If you want to understand why a show sale grosses $3.9 million in 2026, study GenoSource Double Dice-ET (Lot 29, $85,000) — not Sadie. Butler said it without flinching: “She’s the biggest money maker in the sale today… the earning potential is in the hundreds of thousands — that’s no BS, hundreds of thousands in the next 12 to 15 months.”

Here’s why. A Drop-Docs daughter of Lady-Rose Caught-Your-Eye (three-time All-American, out of the Lexington/Black-Rose family), Double Dice sold with 26 embryos included — 16 Salute, 7 Image, 3 Detective — off two flushes that each pulled 50+ oocytes. She scored 87 in Canada, carries +3.25 type, has a full sister whose son was just released into AI, and “flushes like a chicken,” in Butler’s words. Carscadden’s summary is the line that should frame how you read this entire sale: “You throw the word franchise around a lot. This is a franchise kind of cow.”

That’s the model in miniature. The show banner is the marketing; the embryo contract is the business. A cow with a 92-point udder and a banner gets you to the ring — but a cow that flushes 26 viable embryos by elite sires is the one with “hundreds of thousands” of earning potential stapled to her halter. The buyers paying up at this sale weren’t chasing rosettes. They were buying production capacity with a show résumé attached.

Run the numbers on that $21,526 average

A $21,526 live average reads like a hot market. It mostly isn’t — it’s a top-heavy one, and the distinction matters if you’re consigning to or buying from the next one of these.

Watch what one cow does to the headline. Pull Sadie out and the remaining 168 lots average $16,297 — Sadie alone accounts for nearly a quarter of the entire live gross. Pull the top nine lots (everything from $73,000 up) and the other 160 head average roughly $11,400. Those nine animals — about five percent of the catalog — carried half the live gross. (Figures based on the 169 published live lots and their recorded sale prices; the official tally is the sale company’s.)

That’s the shape these elite type sales increasingly take in 2026 — the spring Amplify Sale ran the same way, topping at $63,000 on a single Sadie daughter — and it’s worth saying plainly because the press release never will: the money concentrates hard at the very top of the type market.  The consignment lesson is still blunt, though: the premium dollars chase reliability. A banner already won, a score already assigned, a family already producing — that’s what drove the top of this sale. Projection gets bid more cautiously. Listen to how Butler and Carscadden talked about the unfinished young cows: “wrong in all the right places,” “all she needs is time,” “you won’t recognize her in October.” That’s honest cattle talk, and it’s also the profile that clears at solid-but-not-spectacular money while the finished cattle command the headlines. “Should be good” sells fine. “Is good, here’s the proof” is what writes the six-figure tickets.

The Elite Embryo Sale: a $3,402 tell

The day opened with three #1 IVF embryos from each of 26 elite donor cows, averaging $3,402 per embryo. Don’t skip past this as a warm-up act. It’s a clean read on where breeders think type is heading, because an embryo is a pure genetic bet — no show-ready cow, no banner, just the mating.

Butler said the quiet part out loud right after: “This morning at the embryo sale, we hopefully improved everybody’s value of their cows — when their embryos are worth that much, it justifies cattle prices being higher.” That’s a sale host openly framing the embryo average as price support for the live lots that follow. Read it for what it is — the embryo block and the Double Dice lot and the Sadie price are not three stories. They’re the same story told at three price points: in 2026, an elite show cow is valued as a production asset, and the embryo market is the clearest, cleanest quote on what that production is worth.

The Butlerview factor — worth flagging plainly

One structural note an honest report shouldn’t bury. The high seller stays anchored at Butlerview, the host. Strong host participation is normal and legitimate at a flagship event — nobody believes in the cattle more than the people who assembled them, and Butler was candid that several cows he “absolutely hated to sell” were consigned specifically “to support the sale.” That’s worth keeping in frame when you read the top line. The outside-demand signal — what disinterested third parties paid for the cattle they actively chased — is the cleaner read on real market depth, and it showed up strong: the Elmvue double-strike, the embryo-laden Double Dice, the Maritime and Quebec show winners, and a full catalog that moved through the ring to live bidders on sale day.

What this means for your operation

Three things to carry out of Chebanse:

  • One — Delta-Lambda is the type sire of this moment. He bred the high seller, the third-high seller, and the $135,000 pair, and the commentary kept circling back to Lambda daughters as the cows that “keep getting better every day.” He was also Premier Sire of the 2025 International Holstein Show. If you’re building a show string for the next two years and you don’t have Lambda daughters in the tank, the market just told you where it’s looking.
  • Two — proven commands the premium; projection clears at steady money. EX-95 Jacuzzi at $195,000 and a finished franchise like Sadie set the headlines, while the “wrong in all the right places” young cows moved through in person at sensible figures. Price reliability accordingly, on both sides of the block — and don’t read an online no-bid as a passed lot.
  • Three — the elite donor is a business, not a trophy. This is the one to internalize, because the men selling the cattle said it themselves. Carscadden, twice, unprompted: “a franchise kind of cow.” Butler on Double Dice: “hundreds of thousands in the next 12 to 15 months.” The retained-half-interest “buyer’s call” on Sadie, the $27,000 first-choice female sold before she’s flushed under new ownership, the 26 embryos riding on Lot 29, the $3,402 embryo average — every one of those is a breeder treating genetics as cash flow with a multi-year amortization, not a banner to hang. At these numbers, that’s the only framework that survives contact with the balance sheet.

A $3.9 million day with deep type and a smooth ring is a genuinely good result, and Butlerview, Westcoast, and the consignors earned it. Just don’t let the $21,526 fool you into thinking every lot was on fire. The top of it was white-hot; the rest of the catalog moved steadily, much of it to in-person bidders the online board never recorded. And the breeders who read the difference correctly — the ones buying production, not just placings — are the ones who’ll still be writing the big checks, and cashing them, at the next one.

Key Takeaways

  • The $21,526 average is top-heavy, not broad. Nine cows carried half the gross and pulling Sadie alone drops it to $16,297 — read the distribution, not the headline, before you price your own consignment.
  • Proven pays the premium; projection clears at steady money. A won banner, an assigned score, or a documented embryo package is what writes six-figure tickets — “should be good” sells fine but won’t top the sale.
  • Treat the elite donor as cash flow, not a trophy. Butler called an $85K cow with 26 embryos the real money-maker — the flush schedule and embryo contract, not the rosette, are where the hundreds of thousands live.
  • If you’re building a show string, Delta-Lambda is where the market’s looking. He bred the high seller, the third-high seller, and the $135K pair.

The Sunday Read Dairy Professionals Don’t Skip.

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  • Genomic Testing: Whos Winning and Whos Losing? — Arms your operation with the concrete return-on-investment math behind advanced genetic screening, revealing exactly how to stop bleeding cash on bottom-tier heifers while identifying high-velocity flush candidates early.
  • The Consolidation of the Dairy Industry: What Does the Future Hold? — Exposes the long-term structural shifts reshaping North American seedstock margins, delivering a critical three-to-five-year positioning playbook for operations looking to survive rapid breeder and processor integration.
  • Is Type Dead? — Dismantles the conventional wisdom surrounding traditional show ring scores, proving how modern index frameworks and intensive embryo production lines have permanently transformed the true commercial market value of elite cattle.

Midwest Spring National Holstein Show 2026

Butlerview’s Banner Day, Led by a Pair of Powerhouse Five-Year-Olds

Judge: Pierre Boulet Location: Wisconsin Dairy Showcase 2026

When Judge Pierre Boulet slapped the final tap on Oby-Crest Victor Aria, the barn already knew it had witnessed something special. From a heifer ring brimming with depth to a mature cow class Boulet himself called “unbelievable quality,” the 2026 Midwest Spring National delivered a day where every class reward went to cattle that checked every box — udder, frame, feet and legs, and the kind of balance that turns heads on the colored shavings. 

The Final Drive — Grand Champion Honors

 Oby-Crest Victor Aria

Boulet’s Grand Champion ring belonged to a pair of five-year-olds, and he made no apologies for it. Oby-Crest Victor Aria (Butlerview Farm, Chebanse, IL) wins the purple and also earned Best Udder of Show — a complete cow with a tremendous udder, correct feet and legs, width through the rump, and the textured, quality mammary system the judge called “vacant” and “high-quality.” Stablemate-turned-rival Eixdale Pwrup Alongside (Milk Source LLC, Kaukauna, WI) stood Reserve on power, dairyness, and a standout udder of her own. Rounding out the tricolor, Winright Sidekick Champagne (Butlerview Farm) earned Honorable Mention — a reminder that the future is bright when Intermediate Champions are already this correct.

  • Grand Champion: Oby-Crest Victor Aria (Victor) — Butlerview Farm, Chebanse, IL
  • Reserve Grand Champion: Eixdale Pwrup Alongside (Alongside) — Milk Source LLC, Kaukauna, WI
  • Honorable Mention: Winright Sidekick Champagne (Sidekick) — Butlerview Farm, Chebanse, IL

Junior Show Grand Champion — Asalia Caps a Lifetime of Work

The Junior Show saved its biggest ovation for Luck-E Merjack Asalia (Tessa & Stella Schmocker, Whitewater, WI), the Lifetime Production winner who swept to Senior and Grand Champion of the Junior Show. Boulet highlighted her tremendous udder, openness of rib, balance, and — most impressively — a mammary system that has held up over many lactations. Ms-AOL Alpha Ralpha (Hayden Burrus, Friona, TX) took Reserve Grand with dairy strength, length, and bone quality that earned her Intermediate Champion honors earlier in the day. Liddleholme KingDoc Morgan(Osinga family, Hico, TX) added Reserve Senior and HM Grand to a strong four-year-old showing. 

Intermediate Champions — Young Cow Power on Full Display

Winright Sidekick Champagne

Boulet called the Intermediate lineup “a tremendous show of young cows,” and the tricolor reflected that depth. In the Open ring, Winright Sidekick Champagne led on udder quality and dairy balance, edging Reserve Ms-AOL Alpha Ralpha and Honorable Mention Fleury Lambda Beast-ET (Butlerview Farm) — the Spring Junior 2-Year-Old winner who pushed hard on her dairy, angular frame and best udder of that class. In the Junior Show, Ralpha took Intermediate Champion with Stone-Front King Doc Herbie (Schmocker & Kropf, Whitewater, WI) Reserve and Delcreek Crash My Party (Addison Lortie, Albion, IN) taking HM. 

Junior Champions — Glitter Girl’s Winter Yearling Takes the Top

Butlerview Glitter Gir

The heifer ring belonged to Butlerview Glitter Girl-ET (Butlerview, A. Clark, P. Conroy & K. Doeberiener), the Winter Yearling winner Boulet picked on pure balance, bone quality, and dairyness — “not the biggest, but the most complete.” Go-Sho Detect Revenge-ET (Butlerview Farm) stood Reserve off a dominant Spring Yearling win, and MS Buckmeadow BE Rosabel-ET (Buckley & Carrier, Lawrenceburg, KY) earned HM — and went on to claim Junior Champion of the Junior Show plus Champion Bred & Owned on the strength of her Fall Calf victory. Butlerview Master Shock-ET (Addison Lortie) took Reserve Junior of the Junior Show, and Kamps-Rx Abercombi Abella(Kamps family, Darlington, WI) rounded out the tricolor. 

Premier Awards

Butlerview Farm absolutely owned the banner board — claiming Premier Breeder & Exhibitor of the Heifer Showas well as Premier Exhibitor Overall — a jaw-dropping run built on Glitter Girl, Revenge, Champagne, Aria, Zany, and Beast, among others. Luck-E Holsteins (Hampshire, IL) capped it off as Premier Breeder Overall, underscoring the depth of their breeding program across the ring. The Junior Best Three Females banner went to Butlerview Farms, with Walk-Era Farms in second and Crave Bros. in third. Luck-E Holsteins also took Senior Best Three Females.

Judge’s Takeaway

Boulet didn’t mince words. “What a show — and what a great show cow,” he said after the final tap, calling out the organizers, photographers, social media team, and especially the exhibitors for delivering a class of cattle that made every decision difficult. From Winter Calves with genuine spring of rib to mature cows carrying textured udders and stout bone quality, the 2026 Midwest Spring National proved this event has earned its seat at the national table. 

Congratulations to every breeder and exhibitor who made this one a show to remember. 👏

Winter Calf (20)

  1. St-Yle-SA Carry The Joy-Red (Kevin) — Blake Schroeder, Belmont, WI (B&O)
  2. Opsal Call My Name-ET (Master) — Troy Opsal, Blue Mounds, WI
  3. Milkboyz Major Aura-ET (Major) — Trace Johnson & Bryce Cullen, Poplar Grove, IL
  4. Red-Violet Major Dutchess-ET (Major) — Claire & Luke Ziemba, Cambridge, WI
  5. MtElgin Dice Ruffles-Red (Dice) — Kel Philips, Stephensville, TX (1st Jr)
  6. Nehls-Valley Best Afterhours (Best) — Sara Feldmann & Cupid Cattle Co., Sheboygan, WI
  7. Albedam Arc Cherry Bomb (Architect) — Jenna & Vanessa Achterhof, Wilson, WI
  8. Curr-Vale-AE Majr Belvedere (Major) — Osinga family, Hico, TX (2nd Jr)
  9. Genosource Major League-ET (Major) — Harbaugh & Loehr families, Marion, WI
  10. Lyngold Smft Doodlebug-ET (Summerfest) — Ashley Carns, Farley, IA

Fall Calf (35)

  1. MS Buckmeadow BE Rosabel-ET (Bullseye) — Colt & Luke Buckley & Andrew Carrier, Lawrenceburg, KY (1st Jr, Jr B&O)
  2. Milksource Avengr Cazadores (Avenger) — MilkSource LLC, Kaukauna, WI
  3. Genosource Acting Agent-ET (Architect) — Brey family, Sturgeon Bay, WI (2nd Jr)
  4. Ms Turbos Majr Trouble-ET (Major) — Milk Source LLC & Ransome Rail Farms, Kaukauna, WI
  5. Ms Major Carma-ET (Major) — Maple-Leigh Futures, Arizona Dairy Co. & Grai-Rose Cattle, Delavan, WI
  6. Butlerview Lambda Blaze-ET (Delta-Lambda) — Butlerview Farm, Chebanse, IL
  7. Golden-Oaks Harris Brynn-ET (Harris) — Nickels, Buske & Phoenix, Watertown, WI
  8. Crystal Oak TStruck Brooke (Thunder Struck) — Derek Christoph, Luxemburg, WI
  9. Overside Haliant-P Justice (Haliant-P) — Kenlee Philips & Makayla Osinga, Stephensville, TX
  10. Butlerview Major Celine-ET (Major) — Butlerview Farm, Chebanse, IL

Summer Yearling (24)

  1. Butlerview Master Shock-ET (Master) — Addison Lortie, Albion, IN (1st Jr)
  2. SPF Angel Eyes-ET (Eye Candy) — Harbaugh & Loehr families, Marion, WI (2nd Jr)
  3. DBJ&H Master Crispix-ET (Master) — Nickels & Buske, Watertown, WI
  4. Blacklillys Mj Liability-ET (Major) — Butlerview Farm, Chebanse, IL
  5. Ember-Lit Illustrat Kyra (Illustrator) — Tyler Butts, Evansville, WI
  6. Oakfield Major Jade-ET (Major) — Gavin Carncross, Lodi, WI
  7. Fraeland Major Broadway (Major) — Osinga family, Hico, TX
  8. Curr-Vale Enrgy Armcandy-ET (Energy) — Kenlee & Kel Wade Philips, Stephensville, TX
  9. Go-Sho Avenger Overdrive-ET (Avenger) — Tessa & Stella Schmocker, Whitewater, WI (B&O, Jr B&O)
  10. DBJ&H Mastr Coco Pebbles-ET (Master) — Sloan & Hovden, Marshall, WI

Spring Yearling (25)

  1. Go-Sho Detect Revenge-ET (Detective) — Butlerview Farm, Chebanse, IL
  2. KCCK Candy Apple-ET (Eye Candy) — Kruse brothers, Dyersville, IA (B&O)
  3. Betley Unstop Laua-Red-ET (Unstopabull) — Jacob & Claire Betley, Pulaski, WI
  4. Ms FemFatale Major Ego-ET (Major) — La Femme Fatale Syndicate & Chelsea Holschbach, Kaukauna, WI
  5. Overside Harpy Rachelle (Harpy) — Katie Osinga, Hico, TX
  6. Bella-Ridge Like A Queen (Major) — Harbaugh & Loehr families, Marion, WI (1st Jr)
  7. Juddale Blings Beauty (Link) — Jamie Judd, La Valle, WI
  8. Korian Bullseye Prosper-ET (Bullseye) — Brian & Koral Harbaugh, Postville, IA
  9. Go-Sho Outof This World-ET (Avenger) — Schmocker & Kropf, Whitewater, WI (2nd Jr)
  10. Walk-Era EC Ambition-ET (Eye Candy) — Walk-Era Farms Inc, Wisconsin Dells, WI

Winter Yearling (20)

  1. Butlerview Glitter Girl-ET (Bruins) — Butlerview, A. Clark, P. Conroy & K. Doeberiener, Chebanse, IL (B&O)
  2. Miss Master Elite-ET (Master) — Grai-Rose Cattle Co. & Jeremiah Lungwitz, Petaluma, CA
  3. Walk-Era Aint She Fancy-ET (Direct) — Andrew & Sarah Hetke, Reedsburg, WI
  4. Farnear Liquid IV (Liquidcourage) — Adelyn Ford, Texico, NM
  5. Crave LC Jaded 16438-ET (Liquidcourage) — Crave Brothers Farm LLC, Waterloo, WI
  6. Curr-Vale-AE Direct Epic-ET (Direct) — Osinga family, Hico, TX (1st Jr)
  7. Booth-Haven Lombardi Legend (Lombardi) — Campbell & Royce Booth, Plymouth, WI (2nd Jr)
  8. DV-Gibbs J Lewis Caylee-ET (Jerry Lewis) — James Brown & Benjamin Voelz, Hastings, MN
  9. Miss Salute Eazy E (Salute) — Blackjack, Tyler Dickerhoof & Grai-Rose Cattle Co., Wykoff, MN
  10. Walk-Era A Halle Berry-ET (Alpha) — Walk-Era Farms Inc, Wisconsin Dells, WI

Fall Yearling (17)

  1. Kamps-Rx Abercombi Abella (Master) — Demi, Elliot & Alayah Kamps, Darlington, WI (1st Jr, B&O)
  2. Our-Favorite Endzone-ET (Lombardi) — Butlerview Farm, Chebanse, IL
  3. HammerTime Major Nirvana (Major) — Butlerview Farm, Chebanse, IL
  4. Ms Crave Belive Tiffany-ET (Believe-P) — Brian Coyne & Patrick Crave, Waterloo, WI
  5. Kingsway Major Trophy (Major) — Elsass & Trbovich, Wapakoneta, OH
  6. Hans-Gen Master Roku (Master) — Osinga family, Hico, TX
  7. Walk-Era EC Stick Shift-ET (Eye Candy) — Walk-Era Farms Inc, Wisconsin Dells, WI
  8. Ar-Line Camden Daytona (Camden) — Kyla Johnson, Tomah, WI
  9. Kamps-Rx Appleb Arden-ET (King Doc) — R & K Kamps, Dalton Anderson & Dennis Bowers, Darlington, WI
  10. Red-Violet DL Doechii-ET (Delta-Lambda) — Timothy Ziemba & Johnathan Heinsohn, Cambridge, WI

Summer Junior 2-Year-Old (2)

  1. Forest-Ridge Eyecandy Emory (Eye Candy) — Adella & Ainsley Loehr, Eden, WI (1st Jr, BU, B&O)
  2. Heatherstone Roku-Red (Hulu) — Chelsea Holschbach, Baraboo, WI

Spring Junior 2-Year-Old (9)

  1. Fleury Lambda Beast-ET (Delta-Lambda) — Butlerview Farm, Chebanse, IL (BU)
  2. Yellowstone Summerhummer (Summerfest) — Schultz & Sipiorski, Seymour, WI
  3. Mell-View Thunderstorm Dot-C (Thunder Storm) — Krohlow family, Poynette, WI
  4. Go-Sho DL Over-The-Top-ET (Delta-Lambda) — Schmocker & Kropf, Whitewater, WI (1st Jr, B&O)
  5. Ms Alpha Mystery-Red-ET (Alpha) — Coltan & Eastan Brown, Strum, WI
  6. Go-Sho Tats Groovy Julie-ET (Tatoo) — Schmocker & Kropf, Whitewater, WI (2nd Jr)
  7. Go-Sho Stones Savingrace-ET (Chief) — Tessa & Stella Schmocker, Whitewater, WI
  8. Bigten Harmony Of Notes (Harmony) — Rebecca & Carter Murphy, Poynette, WI
  9. Milk-N-More Fpt Elly Belly (Footprint) — Garrett & Gracelyn Bishop, Watertown, WI

Winter Senior 2-Year-Old (12)

  1. Winright Sidekick Champagne (Sidekick) — Butlerview Farms, Chebanse, IL (BU)
  2. Mortenson Master Anika (Master) — Sunkist Acres & Cupid Cattle Company, Glencoe, MN
  3. Famipage Detective Jazz-ET (Detective) — Butlerview Farms, Chebanse, IL
  4. Walk-Era EC Kalamity (Eye Candy) — Walk-Era Farms Inc, Wisconsin Dells, WI (B&O)
  5. Ms Rompen Midnight-Red-ET (Rompen) — Austin Oliver, Sheboygan Falls, WI
  6. MS Blessing-ET (Energy) — Heatherstone Enterprises, Baraboo, WI
  7. Ladyrose Sierra Leone-ET (Hancock) — Rosedale Genetics Ltd, Oxford, WI
  8. MS Brilliance-ET (Energy) — Heatherstone Enterprises, Baraboo, WI
  9. Go-Sho Olivias Thee Original (Chief) — Tessa & Stella Schmocker, Whitewater, WI (1st Jr)
  10. Wargo-Acres Architect Made (Architect) — Gavin Carncross, Lodi, WI (2nd Jr)

Fall Senior 2-Year-Old (6)

  1. Ms-AOL Alpha Ralpha (Alpha) — Hayden Burrus, Friona, TX (1st Jr, BU)
  2. Royal-Vista Master Arrabell (Master) — Chad Bruss, Markesan, WI
  3. Danhof Nashville Georgia (Nashville) — Danhof & Adams families, Waukon, IA (B&O)
  4. Heatherstone Cassidy (Thunder Storm) — Heatherstone Enterprises, Baraboo, WI
  5. Krullcrest Doorman Rolo-ET (Doorman) — Lambrecht family, Kewaunee, WI (2nd Jr)
  6. Jauquet Master Gwen (Master) — Lane & Karter Kinnard, Kewaunee, WI

Junior 3-Year-Old (4)

  1. Stone-Front King Doc Herbie (King Doc) — Schmocker & Kropf, Whitewater, WI (BU, 1st Jr)
  2. Great-Heritage GC Paula-ET (Gold Chip) — Golden Oaks Farm, Wauconda, IL
  3. Miss Unix Sangria (Unix) — Kayden Wallace & Daniel Weidner, Stoughton, WI (B&O)
  4. Makamoov-RCH Vintage Kicks (Sidekick) — Mia Smith, Elroy, WI (2nd Jr)

Senior 3-Year-Old (4)

  1. Delcreek Crash My Party (Master) — Addison Lortie, Albion, IN (1st Jr, BU)
  2. RJR Gone Away-ET (Rebel) — Reuter Dairy Inc, D. Koss & Glenn-Ann Holsteins, Peosta, IA (B&O)
  3. Redline Jagger Impact (Jagger) — Blackjack, Grai-Rose & Nathan Johnson, Wykoff, MN
  4. Road-View Paiges Parsly (Parsly) — Haylee & Grant Yager, Mineral Point, WI (2nd Jr)

4-Year-Old (8)

  1. Jacobs Chief Dina (Chief) — Milksource, Ransom Rail & Laurie Fischer, Kaukauna, WI (BU)
  2. Liddleholme KingDoc Morgan (King Doc) — Osinga family, Hico, TX (1st Jr)
  3. Courtlane Hancock Daiquiri (Hancock) — Brody & Brinlee Courtney, Ridgeway, IA (2nd Jr, B&O)
  4. J-Kiko Doc Finale-TW (King Doc) — Butlerview Farm, Chebanse, IL
  5. Desperle Kim Lambda (Delta-Lambda) — Butlerview Farm, Chebanse, IL
  6. Luck-E Moovin A-Moon-ET (Moovin) — Gunst, Smith & Klever, Hartford, WI
  7. R-Vision Altitude Chablis (Altitude) — Smith, Ziemba & Ling, Watertown, WI
  8. Bur-Rodz Rager Pippa (Rager) — Copper Ridge Farms, Janesville, WI

5-Year-Old (9)

  1. Oby-Crest Victor Aria (Victor) — Butlerview Farm, Chebanse, IL (BU)
  2. Eixdale Pwrup Alongside (Alongside) — MilkSource LLC, Kaukauna, WI
  3. Fortale Lambda Aliyha-ET (Delta-Lambda) — Butlerview Farm, Chebanse, IL
  4. Redcarpet Doorman France-ET (Doorman) — Ben & Chad Bruss, Markesan, WI
  5. Luck-E Awesome Azakoo-ET (Awesome) — Blake Engel, Hampshire, IL (1st Jr, B&O)
  6. Goodtime-KTT Doc Desiree (King Doc) — Verthein family, Altura, MN (2nd Jr, Jr B&O)
  7. R&K-Hols BMaster Yellow (Brewmaster) — Milkinaire Dairy, Two Rivers, WI
  8. Luck-E Devour Aboot (Devour) — Tessa & Stella Schmocker, Whitewater, WI
  9. Luck-E AV Moovin Alissa-ET (Moovin) — Jayse & Jaymeson Pudwill, Dakota, IL

Aged Cow (5)

  1. McGarr-Farms Unix Zany (Unix) — Butlerview Farm, Chebanse, IL (BU)
  2. Tween Bays Judgy Annia (Judgy) — HammerTime Holsteins & Synergy Dairy, Poynette, WI
  3. R-Vision Doorman Comet (Doorman) — Sarah Fitzgerald, Belvidere, IL
  4. Juniper-Haven Defant Xochilt (Defiant) — Olson family, Lena, WI (1st Jr)
  5. Road-View Storms Doc (King Doc) — Haylee & Grant Yager, Mineral Point, WI (2nd Jr, B&O)

Lifetime Production Cow (2)

  1. Luck-E Merjack Asalia (Merjack) — Tessa & Stella Schmocker, Whitewater, WI (BU, 1st Jr)
  2. Tree-Hayven Awsome Mae (Awesome) — Colton Riedel & Logan Sorg, Pardeeville, WI (2nd Jr)

Group Classes

Junior Best Three Females (3):

  1. Butlerview Farms, Chebanse, IL
  2. Walk-Era Farms, Wisconsin Dells, WI
  3. Crave Bros., Waterloo, WI

Senior Best Three Females (1):

  1. Luck-E Holsteins, Hampshire, IL

Legend: BU = Best Udder of Class – B&O = Bred & Owned – Jr = Junior Show placing

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DUSTY SCHIRM: From Show Ring to Sales Ring Building a Franchise

We all look forward to those times in life when all the pieces come together.  That is exactly what is happening for Dusty Schirm who resides in Chebanse Illinois with his wife Nicole and son Wyatt, awaiting the arrival of their second son due in June.  Dusty is the Show Manager at Butlerview Farm where he tells us he feels fortunate to work with some of the top show cattle and most sought after genetics. (Read more: Exciting Times for Butlerview) “I spend the vast majority of my time working with Joe Price and our crew with the show cattle, preparing everything for the upcoming show season.” This life he loves started at home for Dusty.

dusty family

In His Footsteps

Dusty has always had a keen eye for cows and people and gives credit to his father, Larry Schirm. “The biggest influence in my life has always been my dad. He is a man I have respected as long as I can remember.  He has always been sought after to judge the greatest shows in the world and is someone everyone always enjoys.  Mike Heath is someone who has helped me along with every aspect of learning cattle.  When I was first starting out I would spend weeks with him touring around looking at cattle and trying to learn how to see them in the rough just like he does.  He has also been one of the toughest critics on me and never afraid to push me to be better.”

Dusty’s First Top Model

Dusty’s father and Grandpa both contributed to the star maker he would become.  He looks back fondly, “My start in cattle started in Junior Jersey shows.  Both of my grandparents were Jersey breeders and the passion for not only dairy cattle but the show ring started at a young age.  When I was 8 my grandpa Schirm let me pick out a calf to start my own cow family with and to show that year.  I spotted my calf.  She was a broken color Jersey with quite a bit of white on her and I named her Dusty’s MX Butterscotch and she was a March calf.  Little did I know she would go on to be very successful the following year and be named Jr Champion at all the national shows (World Dairy Expo, Harrisburg, Louisville) and that was when I was hooked!”

dusty clippingLearning the Saw-Dusty Trail

Some people have a natural talent for bringing out the best in dairy cattle.  Dusty is modest and prefers to give credit to others.  “I first started fitting around the age of 16 and was very fortunate to have some great teachers.  Starting out with Terry Rawn and Steve Deam.  Once I turned 18 I worked with Delbert Yoder for the first year and learned many valuable tools.  After that I was fortunate to work along with all the great fitters, Paulo, Roger Turner, Mike Heath, Joel Kietzman and Mark Rueth.”  He continues to study these talents.

Roadways, Roses and Runways

For the observer, fitters are the magic makers of the show scene.  We rarely consider what hard work that must be.  Dusty explains, “For me the hardest challenge in being a fitter was the lifestyle I lived.  I would spend 320 plus days a year on the road never having much free time and when I did have some time off I would usually spend that looking for the next great one on the road.  It is a wear and tear business and not for everyone.  There are many highs and lows that also come with being a fitter and a lot of scrutiny win or lose!”  Dusty has learned to make it work.

Learning from the Topliners!

Being at the top of your chosen career is never easy but Dusty has advice to those who would follow the fitters dream, “Starting out is not as tough as one might think. There are many great people in this business that will give anyone a chance.  My advice is when you get an opportunity, take full advantage of the people you are surrounded by.  The reason you are working with those individuals is because they have the formula for success.  Take what they do and apply it to your own goals.”

dusty phoneFrom Heads and Tails to Setting Sales

Looking back Dusty’s career path is a straight line from show string to sales string but thinks it has more serendipity (he encouraged the Bullvine to use big words).  “Last year was my first sale on my own.  It is a funny story how I got pushed into doing one though.  Mike Heath always had a very successful Spring Valley Jersey Sale every other year and last year would have been time for him to do another sale.  When he told me he wasn’t going to do one I thought well, do you think I could do one.  He more or less said yep you are doing one and that was it.  Following in his footsteps was not an easy task because his success with his sales has always been top level.  Mike was great though with helping me through all the steps of having my own sale and with his help and many others we had a very successful sale.”  A little serendipity.  A lot of hard work.

Happy Talk is the Measure of Success

Everybody measures success differently.  For Dusty Schirm he likes to have people talking about him. “Success for me is getting calls from all the consignors that let me know they saw their animal win at a show or they just talked to the buyer of the animal who wants to come to the farm to purchase another one or to see the animal’s cow family.  That for me is how I measure success from a sale when seller and buyer are happy and say, “Thank you!”

Dusty Follows the Stars from Runway to Retail

Over the course of his “hands-on” career, Dusty has been side-by-side with many great cows.  As always, cow-men find it hard to pick out favorites.  “There are so many I have loved to be part of.  From Jerian Sterling Mason, Dupasquier Cousteau Mamie, Friendly-Acres Linjet Murphy, Co-Vista Airliner Sarah, SavageLeigh Linjet Joy, Harvue Roy Frosty to current stars such as Cookview Goldwyn Monique, Silvermaple Damion Camomile  and R-E-W Happy Go Lucky.  I have been so fortunate to be associated with these individuals over my short career.  But I would have to say my favorite all time was JIF Little Minnie.  I bought Little Minnie as a 3yr old many moons ago in an old tie stall barn before she was popular and she has now gone on to be such a marquee cow in the Jersey breed.”

JIF Little Minnie EX-96 4E All-Canadian Mature Cow 2002 & 2004 All-Canadian Champion Cow 2002

JIF Little Minnie EX-96 4E
All-Canadian Mature Cow 2002 & 2004
All-Canadian Champion Cow 2002

Making Change when Shift Happens

For Dusty the biggest change he has witnessed in his career has happened in the marketplace.  “The value of show cattle is increasing to extremely high ends at the top and losing some of the value for the state show and regional type of cattle.  It used to be if you had a real nice cow with a great pedigree that could win or compete at state show levels, she would be worth $7500-$15000.  Though it’s great to see the value on the greatest show cattle in the world at an all time high, it’s sad to see that the markets for smaller homebred herds to market their individuals are losing their value.”  This brings Dusty to face the future with a forecast.

Survival of the Fittest

Not one to mince words, Dusty looks ahead with a clear eye.  “The number one change ahead for my generation is survival.  This means that milking cows will probably not cut it to raise a family so you must find a niche market to provide more income to support your love for dairy cattle.  Also we must learn the art of mating cattle to achieve our personal goals.  Taking the time to study pedigrees that would be the ideal cross on a cow to make the next great one.  It seems more and more we use the “HOT” sire, which is ok for some matings, but we really need to learn about cow families and thinking outside the box.  Some of the best cattle ever have been as a result from someone doing something no one else would have!”

dusty and WyattFortunes, Favorites and Fatherhood!

Dusty says he is fortunate to have been involved in many great accomplishments from fitting cattle that have won at Madison to owning or selling individuals that have been National Winners or All Americans.  However, these are not number one on his achievement list.  He points out, “My proudest moment ever is seeing my little guy for the first time!”  He continues to add special achievements, “My greatest accomplishment so far would be seeing so many individuals go on to be successful from our Jersey Sale this past spring. It is truly one of my proudest moments seeing the Reserve Jr Champion and Honorable Mention Jr Champion heifers from Madison that sold in the Franchise Sale last spring.” (Check out the great work Dusty and the team are doing for The Franchise Kind II Sale)

Wit, Wisdom and a Happy Wife

Dusty loves the new opportunities opening up in his life and has special visions for the future. Jokingly he suggests, “Perhaps I will start up an internet site that tells the truth about the cattle industry… OOPS! … That’s been done .. The Bullvine!”

The Bullvine Bottom Line

Then seriously Dusty concludes, “I would like to continue the blessings of time shared with my wonderful wife and family and someday have my own herd of cows that my children could carry on with.” No doubt his boys will enjoy learning hand-in-hand with their dad.  Dusty Schirm is a shining example!

 

 

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