Archive for Distinguished Young Holstein Breeder

Curtis Vanden Berge: How Holstein USA’s 2026 Young Breeder Built a 2,800-Cow Herd Around Components

Most 2,800-cow dairies chase volume. Curtis Vanden Berge chased components — and hit 4.17% fat while one cow, Halogen 516-ET, seeded 200-plus descendants in his Bakersfield barn.

Curtis Vanden Berge

When Holstein Association USA CEO Lindsey Worden called with the news, Curtis Vanden Berge didn’t see it coming. “When CEO Lindsey Worden called me to tell me the news, I was truly surprised,” he says. “It’s nice to be recognized for the work we do every day.” 

That recognition is the 2026 Distinguished Young Holstein Breeder award, which he’ll receive at the National Holstein Convention in Orlando in June. But the real story has been building for decades on a family dairy that uprooted once, expanded, and grew into one of California’s most genetics-driven Holstein herds. 

Leaving Mira Loma, Building in Bakersfield

Curtis didn’t “find” dairying — he grew up in the middle of it. He was raised on his family’s dairy near Mira Loma, California, where his father and grandfather sparked his passion for dairy farming and genetic progress. 

In 2004, the family relocated to Bakersfield, expanding the farm and creating opportunities for the next generation. By 2010, Curtis had stepped into day-to-day management at Vanden Berge Dairy. Five years later he became a partner. Today the operation is run by Curtis and his wife Stacey, alongside his brother Trevin and his wife Heidi, while Curtis and Stacey raise their three children — Case, Tessa, and Payton — on the farm. 

2,800 Holsteins, Three Times a Day, Components First

Vanden Berge Dairy now milks about 2,800 Holstein cows in California’s Central Valley, running three-times-a-day milking. 

The numbers behind the award aren’t fluff:

  • Rolling herd average: 27,895 lb milk 
  • Fat: 1,163 lb (4.17%) 
  • Protein: 928 lb (3.33%) 

That profile isn’t accidental. Curtis is driven to continuously improve herd genetics, focusing on increasing components and making sure each generation is better than the last. Higher fat and protein pounds are the priority — and in a market where components carry more of the milk cheque every year, that focus lines up with where progressive Holstein breeders have pushed for the past decade. 

The Cows Behind the Strategy

The genetic shift took off when the first group of Registered Holsteins arrived at Vanden Berge Dairy nearly 15 years ago. One cow in particular, Longfellow Boxer Bianca, showed Curtis what Registered Holsteins could do — her performance in the herd demonstrated their value firsthand. 

Another foundation piece is Seagull-Bay Halogen 516-ET, whose influence keeps spreading through the milking string and heifer pens. Curtis can trace more than 200 descendants of that cow in the herd today, including Vanden-Berge Trpc Daphne-ET EX-90 — proof you don’t have to choose between commercial performance and high-end pedigrees. 

Genomics, Embryos and Beef-on-Dairy — With Discipline

On the tools side, Curtis isn’t dabbling. Vanden Berge Dairy leans on:

  • Genomic testing to sort heifers early and line up matings that move indexes, not just pedigrees 
  • Embryo transfer and IVF to multiply the most profitable cow families faster 
  • Beef-on-dairy to turn lower-genetic-value pregnancies into higher-value calves instead of replacements they don’t need 

That package, combined with Holstein Association USA’s programs and services, gives Curtis a feedback loop: what the cows look like, what they produce, and how it ties back to mating decisions made years earlier. It’s the same shift across top Holstein herds — genomics isn’t a “technology project” anymore, it’s just how breeding decisions get made. 

More Than Genetics: Association Leadership

This award doesn’t just recognize a numbers game. Curtis has been active with the California Holstein Association for years, serving on the board and two years as president — no small commitment while managing a large Western herd. 

That role has put him in the middle of the big questions: how to keep Registered Holsteins relevant to large-pen commercial setups, how to protect breed identity and data integrity in a world of crossbreeding and beef-on-dairy, and how state associations stay valuable when breeders are stretched thin. 

Why This Young Breeder Award Matters

The Distinguished Young Holstein Breeder Award targets breeders ages 21 to 40 who run a profitable Registered Holstein herd and contribute back to the industry. Winners receive travel and lodging for up to two people to the National Holstein Convention, complimentary tickets to the Awards Luncheon, a $2,000 cash award, and a plaque — plus their name engraved on a permanent plaque at Holstein Association USA headquarters in Brattleboro. 

Recent recipients include Tim Rauen of Iowa, Trent Hendrickson of Wisconsin, and Ty Etgen of Ohio. Curtis joins that list at a moment when Western dairies face hard scrutiny on water, emissions, and economics — and a 2,800-cow, components-driven Holstein herd run by a breeder comfortable with both genomic data and a board agenda is exactly the kind of operation that will help decide what the Holstein cow looks like fifteen years from now. 

Curtis Vanden Berge will be recognized as Holstein Association USA’s 2026 Distinguished Young Holstein Breeder during the National Holstein Convention in Orlando, Florida, on Wednesday, June 24. 

Key Takeaways

  • Components are the play. Vanden Berge runs nearly 28,000 lb of milk at 4.17% fat and 3.33% protein because fat and protein pounds are what cash the milk cheque — not raw volume.
  • Genomics, IVF, and beef-on-dairy only pay when they’re part of one system. Test heifers early, multiply your best cow families, and breed the bottom end to beef instead of making replacements you don’t need.
  • One cow can carry a herd. Halogen 516-ET left 200-plus descendants in this string — proof that finding and propagating your best family beats chasing the hot bull every proof run.
  • The award rewards more than numbers. Curtis built it with herd results plus state-association leadership, and that combination is what gets a young breeder recognized at the national level.

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Trent Hendrickson Honored as 2024 Distinguished Young Holstein Breeder

Explore how Trent Hendrickson’s enthusiasm for genetics and devotion to Holsteins secured him the 2024 Distinguished Young Holstein Breeder award. Eager to learn about his path?

A keen interest in genetics, a steadfast commitment to Registered Holsteins®, and the determination to carve his own path have propelled the 2024 Distinguished Young Holstein Breeder to success in the dairy industry. Holstein Association USA proudly recognizes Trent Hendrickson as this year’s Distinguished Young Holstein Breeder. 

Trent, alongside his wife Kelsey, operates Trent-Way Genetics in Blanchardville, Wisconsin. The couple is raising their four young children: Trevor, Grace, Lee, and Jeffrey. 

Over the past 12 years, Trent and Kelsey have built Trent-Way Genetics from the ground up, turning it into a nationally and internationally acclaimed name. They specialize in balanced type cows and Red and Red-Carrier genetics. Their herd comprises 400 cows and 600 young stock, boasting a Rolling Herd Average of 28,483 pounds of milk with a 4.0% fat test and 3.2% protein. 

“I’m thankful and proud of what we’ve accomplished to be able to receive this award,” Trent shares. “I’m kind of in awe about it and excited to represent this next generation of young farmers.”

Raised on his family’s Jeffrey-Way Holsteins in Belleville, Wisconsin, Trent actively participated in the Junior Holstein Association and engaged in showing and dairy judging. After high school, he attended the University of Wisconsin-Platteville, earning a degree in animal science with a dairy emphasis. In 2010, Trent returned to farm at Jeffrey-Way Holsteins. 

In 2011, Trent began farming with Dave Erickson, a Registered Holstein breeder approaching retirement. Dave handled crop management and feed provision, while Trent owned 100% of the cows. Six years later, Trent and Kelsey purchased the building site and continued to expand the farm. 

Trent’s keen eye for quality cows and focus on d

airy cattle genetics have been pivotal to the farm’s success. They’ve marketed breeder bulls and sent 45 bulls from Trent-Way Genetics into A.I. The farm has also bred 83 Excellent cows with the Trent-Way prefix and ranked second in BAA for herds over 250 in 2023, with a BAA of 109.5. 

Behind this high-performing herd and sought-after genetics is a man passionate about breeding top-tier cows and raising his family on the farm. At Trent-Way Genetics, the Hendricksons cherish hard work, a love for the industry, and pride in breeding outstanding cow families.

The Distinguished Young Holstein Breeder Award recognizes significant accomplishments of young Registered Holstein breeders for their commitment to preserving the dairy industry and for achieving excellence in their daily lives. Trent Hendrickson will be recognized on June 26, 2024, during the National Holstein Convention in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Holstein Association USA, Inc. provides programs, products, and services to dairy producers to enhance genetics and improve profitability. These include animal identification and ear tags, genomic testing, mating programs, dairy records processing, classification, communication, consulting services, and Holstein semen.

Summary; Trent Hendrickson, a 2024 Distinguished Young Holstein Breeder, has achieved success in the dairy industry through his interest in genetics, commitment to Registered Holsteins®, and determination. Hendrickson and his wife Kelsey have built Trent-Way Genetics in Blanchardville, Wisconsin, specializing in balanced type cows and Red and Red-Carrier genetics. The herd consists of 400 cows and 600 young stock, with a Rolling Herd Average of 28,483 pounds of milk with a 4.0% fat test and 3.2% protein. Hendrickson attended the University of Wisconsin-Platteville and returned to farm at Jeffrey-Way Holsteins in 2010. He and Kelsey purchased the building site and continued to expand the farm. Their focus on dairy cattle genetics has led to success, with 83 Excellent cows bred with the Trent-Way prefix and ranking second in BAA for herds over 250 in 2023.

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