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Small Cows, Big News: First Million Dollar Auction?

This week's updates from the wonderful world of miniature cattle.

Hey everyone!

It’s been a while. There haven’t been many online auctions over the last couple of months. Is this the slow season every year? I’ve also been staying super busy trying to get my new Creatures platform ready for its debut. More on that soon.

I couldn’t let Pandarosa’s April 5 auction go unnoticed, though. Wow! I know many of us have mixed (or negative!) feelings on bottle calves and other aspects of their program, but I still think we can and should all learn from their strategies and success.

I was curious from the first announcement that Pandarosa Ranch was going to trailer a whole group of calves from Illinois to country‑music legend Randy Travis’s ranch in Tioga, Texas. We’ve already seen their success in partnering with influencer Katie Van Slyke, but this took it to another level. When the dust settled, the team had reached an incredible total of $1,021,250 on 66 calves — the highest grossing miniature cattle auction I’ve tracked to date.

Below you’ll find a clean scorecard, a look at how this Texas roadshow stacks up against Pandarosa’s last two sales, and a few lessons we can all take away.

📊  Quick stats

  • Cattle Lots sold: 66

  • Gross hammer: $1,021,250

  • Average price: $15.5k

  • Median price: $15.0k

  • High lot: “Betty Boop” micro‑mini Panlander heifer (pictured above) – $28.0k

  • Bottle babies (50 head): $15.3k avg

  • Chondro positive (34 head): $15.7k avg

  • Steer/Bull add‑ons (17 lots): potential additional revenue of $150k

  • (Lot 67, the $40k mini donkey, is excluded from these calculations)

🔎  Why the Texas location worked

1. Bigger stage, broader wallet pool

Hosting at a well‑known ranch 45 minutes from Dallas–Fort Worth drew local bidders who wouldn’t drive to Illinois. Live head‑count was roughly double earlier auction turnout.

2. Celebrity halo

Social posts tagged with @therandytravis tripled Pandarosa’s 48‑hour reach (26k vs 8k views). More eyeballs equalled more pre‑approved bidders, and higher prices.

3. Haul cost vs. sale premium

Moving 66 calves ~800 miles may have cost up to $40k in trucking, crew lodging, and portable pens. But this out‑of‑state move lifted gross sales significantly over trend, more than paying for itself.

4. Genetics & presentation

Silver and silver‑beltie calves brought prices significantly higher than the average. Calves with precise height projections, chondro status, and more professional looking photos closed 10–15 % stronger than comparable “mystery” calves.

5. Bottle‑fed advantage

Bottle babies brought $5k more than their weaned peers, reinforcing the market’s appetite for calves that are younger, more friendly and interested in people, at least initially.

6. Catalog sequencing matters

The high seller, Betty Boop - Lot  22, appeared mid‑sale after bidding energy was already warm. Saving top calves for the back third can preserve excitement and pricing power.

Price Comparison with Previous Pandarosa Auctions

🐮  Take‑aways for breeders & buyers

  1. Venue matters. A strategic location can justify large transport bills when it taps into a fresh buyer pool.

  2. Lean on influencers who fit the livestock lifestyle. Celebrity star power brought new bidders and boosted social proof.

🤔  Your thoughts?

Would you trailer calves halfway across the country if the venue and partnership promised a significant revenue bump? Have you used local influencers to move livestock? I would love to hear from you!

Until next time,

Elliott

P.S. I’m tracking two auctions coming up, both closing on Sunday, April 27. One from the Webb Cattle Company: “Some Bunny Needs a Highland,” and the other the “Northwest Highland Cattle Association Online Sale.”

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