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Calving ease bulls
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<blockquote data-quote="Jeanne - Simme Valley" data-source="post: 839885" data-attributes="member: 968"><p>Oh - sooooo very very true!!! What I call "barn blind". One thing about showing cattle - you soon learn how barn blind you are or are not. Well, some do - some just blame the bad judge. :banana: </p><p></p><p>I really really don't want to offend anyone, I just have a very hard time understanding why anyone would propogate a breed that has not (in this day and age) improved it's calving ease. I find the same problem with the Belgian Blues - I have been told by breeders that anything 3/4 & above, you need to PLAN on C-section. :shock: </p><p>If a breed couldn't be turned out to propagate on it's own, it's hard to understand it's usefullness in our industry. I must be looking at it differently. If a breed can't be used on it's own heifers, than if turned out on their own, they would soon eliminate themselves.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jeanne - Simme Valley, post: 839885, member: 968"] Oh - sooooo very very true!!! What I call "barn blind". One thing about showing cattle - you soon learn how barn blind you are or are not. Well, some do - some just blame the bad judge. :banana: I really really don't want to offend anyone, I just have a very hard time understanding why anyone would propogate a breed that has not (in this day and age) improved it's calving ease. I find the same problem with the Belgian Blues - I have been told by breeders that anything 3/4 & above, you need to PLAN on C-section. :shock: If a breed couldn't be turned out to propagate on it's own, it's hard to understand it's usefullness in our industry. I must be looking at it differently. If a breed can't be used on it's own heifers, than if turned out on their own, they would soon eliminate themselves. [/QUOTE]
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