Forward July 2014 | Page 45

of his clients, who were fleece weighing, to let him purchase these sheep and these were then mated to the stud’s highest cutting AAAM type wool rams. The results from this mating in 1970 were very encouraging with some of the progeny cutting more wool than his normal stud ewes. In the 1970s, he fired the enthusiasm of more than 1000 WA and interstate farmers to join him and form a loose cooperative breeding organisation, AMS. Members of the AMS began measuring the fleeces for the first time and contributed animals to the overall breeding program, which was by far the biggest in Australia. During 1971 and 1972, Jim travelled extensively throughout WA talking to farm groups, explaining the benefits of fleece weighing, offering to help interested farmers with their weighing during shearing and encouraging them to become members of AMS. This saw AMS continue to expand over the next 10 years and at its peak it had more than 1300 members together with two million ewes in their combined flocks. Due to his scientific training, Jim developed and implemented novel changes to all the possible ways to measure and improve the flock, with the aim to grow finer and more valuable wool. He wanted to find a sheep big enough to carry the weight of extra wool being generated by the fleece weighing technique. He began body weighing the hogget sheep. The results from this selective breeding program took the society’s lambing percentage from about 75 per cent, to almost 120 per cent over Jim Shepherd (seated at the centre) during his school days with the 1946 Shooting Team that won the Commonwealth Challenge Cup. the years, a huge financial gain. At the time, the concept flew in the face of tradition but his motivation was based on a belief in what he was doing and not on monetary gain. Jim encouraged the society with experience gained from running the central breeding flock, to form 150 ram breeding co-operatives (i.e. daughter studs, with each group having five to 30 farmer members) located in South Australia, Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland. His work attracted the attention of two American scientists, Art Pope and Clair Terrill, who visited Mulureen and were very enthusiastic about his efforts. South African Cameron McMaster modelled the Dohne Merino Reunions & Events 2014 Constitution upon that of the AMS. By the 1990s, the concepts of measurement and scientific breeding that he pioneered were taken up widely by many sheep breeders outside the AMS. This encouraged geneticists and other scientists to provide more extensive services to the breeding industry. His work for the industry was recognised in 1987 when he was appointed an Officer of the Order of Australia for service to primary industry, particularly to the wool and sheep meat industries, and in 2006 when he was inducted into the Royal Agricultural Society Agricultural Hall of Fame. Article courtesy of Farm Weekly, Perth. Help us to organise your reunion – contact [email protected] or (+61 8) 9377 8522. Saturday 12 July Singapore Reunion Dinner and Performance (see reunion advertisement for connected events) Grand Copthorne Waterfront Hotel Saturday 6 September Melbourne Reunion Venue to be confirmed Sunday 21 September Car Rally Foundation Pavilion, School Saturday 4 October Annual Dinner Dining Hall, School Saturday 4 October Reunion for Classes of 1964, 1974, 1984 (At Annual Dinner) Dining Hall, School Wednesday 15 October AGM Foundation Pavilion, School Saturday 15 November South West