Telos said:
. Heavy muscled and sound structure in many cases appears to be antagonistic
just for fun, i had my horse chiropracter come over and look at my heifers and massage one. this heifer has a muscle thickness that is about 3-5 inches down from her hooks to her pins, that almost seems to be subtly double muscled. the total package bull calf, has a tremendous amount of thickness here, making him look squarer hipped than his thickness through his pins would suggest. we massaged on that muscle, and pulled on her tail, rocking her forward and back (something routinely done with horses). immediately, her tail set relaxed and she was freer moving. i think i said it before, but the total package calf is very sound on his pasterns, compared to his half sister who we massaged on, in the pasterns. since my cows aren't true big pasture cattle, this may become an issue.
i feel there are very few individuals that can create something better than themselves. improvements are generally made by filling voids, fixing weaknesses. to me, there are so few great one's, if there is such a thing, that it's not worth wasting time on. great cattle seem to not be extreme in any one trait, hence the much used "balancer" marketing strategies, especially by people who were around some of the "great" cattle such as leachman at ankony during one of it's heydays. to me, the sign of a great one, is his ability to pass on traits that seem to be linked for some reason, and perhaps that they are homozygous for dominant, as well as recessive traits. again, why line breeding should be practiced more.