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Blood/DNA test to detect a free martin
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<blockquote data-quote="pdfangus" data-source="post: 928337" data-attributes="member: 6543"><p>for the first ime ever I am tempted to unsubscribe from a thread....</p><p></p><p>this topic is not worth all this thought time and effort.</p><p></p><p>the number of breedable heifers born twin to a bull that would be fertile is so small that it is a useless pursuit....but it seems to be the nature of man to pursue the impossible just to say they can.</p><p></p><p>Seldom is the freemartin heifer ever worth such pursuit and the reasons for same just totally elude me. pursuit of extremes in the cattle business is seldom a profitable endeavor. Pursuit of breedable freemartins (for reasons that elude me) is such a pursuit of extremes. </p><p></p><p>the species we deal with are bovines....what happens in equines or caprines or ovines or swine or humanoids is irrelevant.</p><p></p><p>is the concept of the fact of a free martin irrelevant becasue chickens lay eggs?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="pdfangus, post: 928337, member: 6543"] for the first ime ever I am tempted to unsubscribe from a thread.... this topic is not worth all this thought time and effort. the number of breedable heifers born twin to a bull that would be fertile is so small that it is a useless pursuit....but it seems to be the nature of man to pursue the impossible just to say they can. Seldom is the freemartin heifer ever worth such pursuit and the reasons for same just totally elude me. pursuit of extremes in the cattle business is seldom a profitable endeavor. Pursuit of breedable freemartins (for reasons that elude me) is such a pursuit of extremes. the species we deal with are bovines....what happens in equines or caprines or ovines or swine or humanoids is irrelevant. is the concept of the fact of a free martin irrelevant becasue chickens lay eggs? [/QUOTE]
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Blood/DNA test to detect a free martin
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