THE 2012 junior champion Red Angus female at Beef 2012 in Rockhampton and Sydney Royal champion has continued her supremacy after reigning supreme champion in the breed at this year's Royal Melbourne Show.
Of the eight exhibitors, judge Andy Withers, Naracoorte, SA, awarded the 3.5-year-old, Bolton Girls Whisper-Gucci, who had superb twin bull calves at-foot, the prestigious crown.
The cow is owned in partnership with Tom Wilding-Davies, WD Cattle, Holbrook, NSW, and is a daughter of the incredible Trevone Park Whisper C11, who won the cattle industry's ultimate accolade in 2012 after helping the Red Angus team take out the Hordern Trophy title at Sydney Royal.
Whisper-Gucci is an AI to Mission Statement P27 - imported Canadian genetics - while her calves are out of Canadian bull Fat Tony.
"They are a little bit different in type but they are massive - they are seven-months-old and are doing really well off their mother for her second lot of calves," Aimee Bolton said.
"You can see in her bull calves she is producing enough milk and is a good mother."
The Bolton Girls plan to exhibit her at the Geelong Show next weekend where Red Angus will be showcased as the feature breed.
Following the show season, Aimee Bolton said the cow's bull calves would be weaned from her and Whisper-Gucci would be joined to Canadian genetics in December.
"The past four years the Red Angus breed has taken out interbreeds at Rockhampton and Sydney Royal, so despite it being a small breed the quality is amazing," Ms Bolton said.
"We are feature breed at Sydney in 2016 where they are expecting about 200 of them there and everyone is starting to plan for that - we may see further interest in the breed from that (show publicity)."
Mr Withers described the grand champion female class as "beauty and the beast", where junior champion heifer, Black Diamond Miss Red, exhibited by the Kennedy family from Cowra, NSW, had an unspoiled, elegant frame while Whisper-Gucci was dominating in her mass.
"She was very placid and a truly wonderful example of the breed," Mr Withers said.
"You don't see many Red Angus cows here of that size but she was soft, so sound, had a lot of meat content and has done a wonderful job with those twin calves."
Other champions dominating the show circuit included the powerful trio showcased by David Croker, of Wollumbi Red Angus, Marulan, NSW, who won the breed's most successful exhibitor title.
The 13-month-old trio, all out of female Waterfront Birdea HRHB239, included full flush brothers Wollumbi Hi Jack and Wollumbi Laramie who were neck-to-neck in the judging of the grand champion bull. The bulls were ET and AI to GMRA Laramie 5110.
Judge Mr Withers crowned Hi Jack the title, saying he was slightly larger and had greater testicular development than his full brother Laramie.
The trio will be showcased at Sydney Royal Show with one bull expected to return to the Wollumbi herd as a stud sire.
"They were very good bulls out of the same mould," Mr Withers said.
The heifer, Wollumbi Mulberry, was by Red Fine Line Mulberry and was titled reserve junior champion heifer.
The Royal Melbourne continued a stellar run for the stud who had huge success with Wollumbi Hi Star H53 reigning supreme Red Angus exhibit, interbreed champion bull, and a member of the successful interbreed Hordern Trophy team at Sydney Royal Show earlier this year.
Hi Star sold for $22,000 at the Red Angus National Sale this year - the equal Australian record sale price for the breed.