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The Rural Voice, 2003-09, Page 16Oa The view from Top Meadow Kym and Carole Anthony and manager Mike Geddes have a different view for the future of the beef industry Story and photos by Keith Roulston Mike Geddes, Top Meadow Farms farm manager, has been part of the farm's tremenddik growth for the past five years. The view at Top Meadow farms is spectacular, about as spectacular as the growth this Limousin breeding operation has shown in the past decade. Across a valley to the east is the Blue Mountain. Across another to the west is the Niagara Escarpment. Four miles to the north is Georgian Bay. Unlike many farming operations, the setting is not accidental but plays an important part in this farming operation because it was the view that attracted Kym and Carole Anthony to buy the farm. As a young boy growing up in the Montreal area, Kym spent summers visiting and working on his grandparents' dairy farm and developed a love for farming. When he had children of his own, the Toronto resident wanted them to have the same opportunity to spend time in the country and learn where their food came from. So he and Carole bought the farm near Heathcote in Grey County and Top Meadow was born. What's happened in the past 10 years, however, is a story of growth that has made Top Meadow a leading source of beef genetics in North America and innovation that's creating its own brand of meat products. The farm started as a commercial beef operation and after much research, a Limousin bull was selected as herd sire, explains Mike Geddes, the farm manager. From there 12 THE RURAL VOICE select Limousin females were accumulated. After the numbers were built up, an embryo transfer program was begun. As the farm grew the need for fresh genetics in the North American Limousin gene pool became, apparent to farm management. "That led us to go to France, the origin of the Limousin breed to import semen and embryos," says Geddes. The first imports came two years ago. 'About 20 years after the limousin cattle came to North America (breeders) added the black gene and the polled gene," Geddes explains. "Through time the look of the Limousin animal has changed. In our opinion they lost some of the carcass traits and overall performance that they possessed when they were first introduced in North America. We've reintroduced the original well -muscled Limousin but with sound structure and easy disposition and now we're seeing hybrid vigour within breed. It's increasing performance and freshening the pedigree." The move has benefitted the farm, says Geddes. "Our bulls arevirtually an out -cross to standard North American pedigrees and have great performance." The new genetics have changed the look of the Top Meadow Limousins. "They're rounder muscled and not as sharp -fronted." When they show animals in three or four big shows a year, that look can put their animals at odds with other cattle in the classes but that hasn't hurt. Top Meadow animals have won nearly everything there is to win in North America. "We're taking these cattle to show the crowd, not so much the judges, where our breeding program is." And the reception has been very good by commercial cattlemen and purebreed operators alike, he says. "They've got volume, they've got muscle, they've got bone, they've got performance. As far as we're concerned it's been a very welcomed change. The last two years at our production sale the high sellers have been some of our out -crossed genetics." The success of the breeding program is witnessed by sales of cattle coast to coast in Canada, all over the U.S. and exports of embryos and semen to Europe and South America. Geddes has squeezed in the interview while preparing for a visit from a group of beef producers from Florida, where they annually sell 12-15 animals to Tallahassee -area fanners. The visit includes customers who have bought at past sales and their neighbours. "A lot of our marketing is word of mouth," Geddes says. "This year 70 per cent of the bulls we sold were to neighbours or family of existing commercial producers." As an exporter, Top Meadow hasn't gone unaffected by the closed borders following the discovery of one cow with BSE in Alberta in May. "You know the last two years in our production sale (held on the farm) we sell roughly 120 animals and 45-50 of those animals go to the U.S.," he says. "We sell a lot of show females and breeding bulls to purebred operations and commercial operations throughout the U.S. Take 50 animals and they'll average $5,000 a piece — it doesn't take long to do the math. It's going to be a major economic loss." Still, he says, "We're going ahead with our sale