What are your opinions of the Miniature Hereford breed? Thanks for your time, Kim from GA

KBell wrote:Hi,
What are your opinions of the Miniature Hereford breed? Thanks for your time, Kim from GA


KNERSIE wrote:I see merit in the idea, but the practise got out of hand. I have no problem with anyone breeding smaller than my ideal hereford, but the goal must still be to achieve a genetically stabile, functional animal. If the miniature breeders have decided we need frame 1 animals or even frame 0 for instance I could have lived with that, but now they brag about frame 0000 animals when its clear to anyone with any breeding experience they have achieved that by breeding runts to runts.
What they are doing now isn't new, that is the exact method that was employed in the '40-'60s to go from functional to belt buckle high animals with no milk and no growth.

KBell wrote:Hi,
What are your opinions of the Miniature Hereford breed? Thanks for your time, Kim from GA








Australian wrote:I have no problem with persons breeding smaller type cattle. Just wondering why most miniature Herefords that I have seen pictures of are very light coloured. Is that the usual colour or haven't I seen any good ones?

KNERSIE wrote:Australian wrote:I have no problem with persons breeding smaller type cattle. Just wondering why most miniature Herefords that I have seen pictures of are very light coloured. Is that the usual colour or haven't I seen any good ones?
Please explain how the darker colour would make them supposedly better?

Glenvale wrote:KNERSIE wrote:Australian wrote:I have no problem with persons breeding smaller type cattle. Just wondering why most miniature Herefords that I have seen pictures of are very light coloured. Is that the usual colour or haven't I seen any good ones?
Please explain how the darker colour would make them supposedly better?
Better in this case is just a regional preference- a dark colour has always been much preferred in the Australian market. The folklore is that a lighter colour indicates an animal with a poor constitution which isn't taking up minerals and nutrients properly.
With the emphasis on folklore.
A rough or coarse coat texture is also said to indicate the same so people prefer as sleek and shiny a coat as possible.
That is a fact, Bonsma has done alot of work on the negative correlation between the felting quality of the hair and the adaptability of the animal especially in warmer climates.
It's made introducing many North American genetics much more difficult due to the opposing market preference here. Given that many of the early North American bulls to have come in during the 80's and 90's with associated coarse, yellow hair were also much too tall, shallow and hard doing for our typical environments so it may have further hardened the prejudice.

Users browsing this forum: stockman12 and 3 guests