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Goodbye Gimli
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<blockquote data-quote="Bright Raven" data-source="post: 1523105" data-attributes="member: 27490"><p>That is a great assessment. The party that bought him is using him on a herd of commercial non-pedigreed cows. Mostly a mix bunch of "black cows". The buyer liked the compact frame and all the "volume".</p><p></p><p>Regarding the set/angle to the rear legs. You made a point that confirms what I have studied and in the area of form, I am a STUDENT. I see what folks call "post" legged to some degree in most cattle depending on how they stand. When pictured, getting one leg in advance of the other certainly diminishes the appearance of post leg. As you say, I see it commonly even in the pictures of stud bulls placed in the major semen catalogs. Particularly if their back legs are together and they are in a position where the weight is being held toward the posterior.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bright Raven, post: 1523105, member: 27490"] That is a great assessment. The party that bought him is using him on a herd of commercial non-pedigreed cows. Mostly a mix bunch of "black cows". The buyer liked the compact frame and all the "volume". Regarding the set/angle to the rear legs. You made a point that confirms what I have studied and in the area of form, I am a STUDENT. I see what folks call "post" legged to some degree in most cattle depending on how they stand. When pictured, getting one leg in advance of the other certainly diminishes the appearance of post leg. As you say, I see it commonly even in the pictures of stud bulls placed in the major semen catalogs. Particularly if their back legs are together and they are in a position where the weight is being held toward the posterior. [/QUOTE]
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