Note sull'episodio
In 1956, Roy Ormiston paid $750 for a five‑year‑old Holstein in a Bowmanville barn — and quietly rewired the breed.
He called her Balsam Brae Pluto Sovereign. Everyone else called her The White Cow. Four Peterborough Grand Championships, six straight All‑Canadian nominations, and 185,327 lbs of lifetime milk later, she'd become the foundation of one of the tightest line‑breeding programs the Holstein world has ever produced. Telstar. Starlite. Tempo. A bronze statue in Hokkaido. A "Roybrook Look" so distinct that classifiers could call it from the alley. This is the story of how one stockman, one closed herd, and one stubborn refusal to chase the bull‑of‑the‑month built a pedigree empire that still runs through 2026 catalogs — and what it cost him to do it.
Key Moments
- Why Ormiston paid $750 for a f ...