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<blockquote data-quote="dun" data-source="post: 65393" data-attributes="member: 34"><p>No. It has to do more with the dryness and the openness of the cervix. It's as much a feel thing as anything else. I'vebred cows that had cervix as rigid as a tick and some that they feel like a smasshed banana, but you still can feel the rings. Although I had one cow that I had a hard time breeding because she was so open that the pipette shot through the cervix and into a horn. Had to stand there and kind of scratch my head and second guess as to if I had the cervix in my hand or not. Once I figured out what was going on it wasn't a problem in the following years.</p><p>That's an eadvantage to breeding the same cows year after year. Not that they'll be necesaarily the same year to year, but it gives you thoughts of oddities when you breed her.</p><p></p><p>dun</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dun, post: 65393, member: 34"] No. It has to do more with the dryness and the openness of the cervix. It's as much a feel thing as anything else. I'vebred cows that had cervix as rigid as a tick and some that they feel like a smasshed banana, but you still can feel the rings. Although I had one cow that I had a hard time breeding because she was so open that the pipette shot through the cervix and into a horn. Had to stand there and kind of scratch my head and second guess as to if I had the cervix in my hand or not. Once I figured out what was going on it wasn't a problem in the following years. That's an eadvantage to breeding the same cows year after year. Not that they'll be necesaarily the same year to year, but it gives you thoughts of oddities when you breed her. dun [/QUOTE]
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