Archive for cattle auction results

Red & White Genetics in Global Demand at Pathway to Panada 2025 Sale

Molly Westwood’s 70-lot Panda sale just grossed £222,936, with £ 3,911 in milk averages, proving that Red & White Genetics are very much in demand worldwide.

Talk about putting your money where your mouth is. Molly Westwood and Panda Holsteins just delivered the ultimate mic drop to every “scale or fail” advocate in the dairy industry with her Pathway of Panda sale results. The July 1st auction at Molland Ridge Farm, Devon, saw 70 lots of predominantly Red & White Holstein genetics gross £222,936 under H&H’s hammer – proving once again that strategic breeding trumps volume every single time.

This wasn’t just another cattle sale. This was a decade-long breeding experiment coming to market, and the results speak louder than any university study on genetic selection strategies. With in-milk animals averaging £3,911 and live lots hitting £3,752 overall, Westwood’s specialized approach to Red & White genetics just delivered a masterclass in niche market domination.

International Buying Power Signals Global Demand

The most telling aspect? Fresh faces dominated the buyer list, with New Zealand investors and first-time registered cattle buyers driving prices that stunned seasoned observers. Rob and Steph Trainor, alongside Hennie and Kerrie Verwaayen from New Zealand, didn’t hesitate to drop 10,000gns on Lot 17, Panda Hulu Hip Hop – the world’s only heifer combining +3000 TPI with +2.00 PTAT, +2.00 Mammary, +2.00 Feet and Legs, and +1.00 DPR.

“We weren’t sure what to expect, but it’s not too different to what we do at home,” Rob Trainor told sales reporters, highlighting how Westwood’s genetics resonate with international breeding standards. When Kiwi buyers convert guineas on their phones mid-auction and still push forward, you know you’ve got something special.

The international interest validates everything we covered in our recent profile of Molly’s journey. Her strategic focus on corrective mating over fashion-chasing has produced animals that don’t just win shows – they command premium prices from sophisticated global buyers.

Breaking Down the Numbers That Matter

Let’s dig into what really happened here:

  • 12 heifer calves averaged £3,378 – proving young genetics carry serious value
  • 20 yearling heifers hit £3,953 average – the sweet spot for international buyers
  • 4 in-calf heifers averaged £3,833 – immediate production value recognized
  • 35 embryos averaged £559 – genetic material flowing globally
  • 20 semen doses at £89/straw – AI potential captured

The standout? Andrew Bailey of Baileys Holsteins dropped 15,000gns on Panda Christmas O’Cookie RC, an 18-month-old Red & White Holstein by Blondin Alpha. Bailey admitted the Red & White genetics continued to be “an addiction that drew him like a moth to the flame” – exactly the kind of passionate buyer response that drives premium markets.

First-Time Buyers Signal Market Expansion

Perhaps most significant was John Cookson and Pearl Trow’s investment of 5,900gns across five head. This Gloucester couple, managing 300 commercial cattle, had never bought registered genetics before. Their willingness to dive into the pedigree market through Panda genetics signals something crucial – Westwood’s approach is accessible enough to attract new participants while maintaining elite status.

“We were excited to see where the new venture took them both,” Pearl Trow said, representing exactly the kind of market expansion every specialized breeder dreams of achieving.

The Molly Westwood Model Vindicated

Remember, this is the same breeder who told banks she wasn’t building a typical dairy operation. Her business plan focused on elite genetics rather than milk volume, and skeptical lenders struggled to understand a dairy that didn’t rely primarily on milk prices. Tuesday’s results prove her vision wasn’t just viable but visionary.

Westwood’s reaction? “Over the moon” doesn’t begin to cover it. “For the two top lots to go to a breeder I’ve never dealt with before, and to New Zealand, respectively, is exciting. I couldn’t believe it,” she told sale attendees.

The sale validates her core breeding philosophy: corrective mating pays off in the long run, deep cow families with balanced sire stacks create lasting value, and specialized focus beats generalized approaches every time.

The international buyer response signals that quality genetics know no borders. When New Zealand investors are willing to manage animals remotely through Panda’s facilities, you’re looking at a business model that transcends traditional geographic limitations.

Tuesday’s sale proved that specialized breeding isn’t just sustainable – it’s superior. While others debate whether dairy’s future lies in scale or specialization, Molly Westwood just provided the definitive answer. Quality genetics, strategic marketing, and unwavering focus on excellence will always find their market, regardless of herd size.

The Pathway of Panda sale wasn’t just about moving cattle. It was about validating a decade of calculated risks, proving that specialized genetics creates premium markets, and demonstrating that the future of dairy breeding belongs to those bold enough to choose quality over quantity.

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