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Udder quality
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<blockquote data-quote="dun" data-source="post: 412704" data-attributes="member: 34"><p>Tha is pretty much what I've experienced. It's a lot faster to screw something up then it is to eliminate it once you have it. Almost seems that since heifers and bulls are born 50:50 that the good udder 50 must go to the bulls and the bad udder 50 ends up on the heifers. Maybe that's one of Murphys lesser known laws of genetics.</p><p>Generally it seems that udders are the hardest to improve and the easiest to make a mess of. Could be that it's so much more obvious then other traits like bad feet, or weak topline, etc.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dun, post: 412704, member: 34"] Tha is pretty much what I've experienced. It's a lot faster to screw something up then it is to eliminate it once you have it. Almost seems that since heifers and bulls are born 50:50 that the good udder 50 must go to the bulls and the bad udder 50 ends up on the heifers. Maybe that's one of Murphys lesser known laws of genetics. Generally it seems that udders are the hardest to improve and the easiest to make a mess of. Could be that it's so much more obvious then other traits like bad feet, or weak topline, etc. [/QUOTE]
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