-XBAR- said:"He himself had a 114 bw but the genes he is passing on are about breed average with I would think a reasonable number of progeny."
The monstrous birthweight genes he passed on got his head cut off.
After using him for 5 seasons?
-XBAR- said:"He himself had a 114 bw but the genes he is passing on are about breed average with I would think a reasonable number of progeny."
The monstrous birthweight genes he passed on got his head cut off.
huntaway said:-XBAR- said:"He himself had a 114 bw but the genes he is passing on are about breed average with I would think a reasonable number of progeny."
The monstrous birthweight genes he passed on got his head cut off.
After using him for 5 seasons?
I agree with you Huntaway. Navaho doesn't breed like his actual birth weight. I just checked several dozen of his offspring and most are in the mid 80's to mid 90's with a couple way over that. I am way more interested in a bulls MCE and CE numbers than his birth weight. When I see a low birth weight but poor calving ease then I get concerned. One of the smallest cows in our herd (probably 1050 or 1100) had a 107 lb. calf unassisted. If I want to sell Shorthorn bulls to commercial breeders their daughters have to be able to calve to terminal sires! Navaho is also the sire of Saskvalley Ripper 260R a bull used at both Saskvalley and Double Star CE +14.4, MCE +7.8 and BW -2.2. In turn Rippser is the sire of Saskvalley Task Force 105T MCE +6, CE +15.6 and BW -2.7.huntaway said:Epd's are an attempt to eliminate the effects of environment and type of cows and non genetic factors when evaluating an animals performance and Saskvalley Navaho is a perfect example. He himself had a 114 bw but the genes he is passing on are about breed average with I would think a reasonable number of progeny.
CE is the % difference unassisted births when used over heifers. Not saskvalley heifers but any heifers in the breed. Interesting Taskforce and Yesterday are both been marketed as calving ease and have him quite close in the pedigree
I'm very interested in the Task Force bull also. He was my favorite at Bowman's. To your knowledge has he been used on heifers much?huntaway said:I just checked several dozen of his offspring and most are in the mid 80's to mid 90's with a couple way over that.
And there are probably a few lighter. Looks like his data is a bell shaped curve as you'd expect from any measurable trait. I wonder what the data looks like out of some programs?
Taskforce semen gets here to late for me to use this year but might use him over my heifers next year. Like the look of the Muridale Master bull on the dams side.
JTM said:I'm very interested in the Task Force bull also. He was my favorite at Bowman's. To your knowledge has he been used on heifers much?huntaway said:I just checked several dozen of his offspring and most are in the mid 80's to mid 90's with a couple way over that.
And there are probably a few lighter. Looks like his data is a bell shaped curve as you'd expect from any measurable trait. I wonder what the data looks like out of some programs?
Taskforce semen gets here to late for me to use this year but might use him over my heifers next year. Like the look of the Muridale Master bull on the dams side.