DLD
Well-known member
I've gotta agree with Jeff on that. I see quite a few succesful commercial breeders buying carrier bulls.
Apparently, just like the club calf and purebred breeders that continue to use these "defective cattle", they believe it's manageable.
I'm not one that believes that all of the very best ones are carriers. I do believe that the entire beef industry would be better off without 'em, but they're obviously not going to disappear anytime soon. The great catastrophes that some were predicting to befall the whole industry tomorrow (if we didn't kill all the carriers, kill 'em tonight) were supposed to have happened last week, or maybe yesterday at the very latest, but they haven't happened yet... Apparently breeders are managing it somehow.
My personal opinion remains that every carrier bull from now on needs to get the knife, and the problem goes away. So far it's not working out that way, but all I can control are the cattle I manage, so that's all I'm losing sleep over.
The biggest problem I'm seeing now is this - the more of these defects that are being talked about and tested for, the less the average Joe cares about 'em. When sale catalogs are listing test results for three or more different defects, they start becoming just another footnote, and like listing 15 different epd's, they lose their impact on alot of folks.
Apparently, just like the club calf and purebred breeders that continue to use these "defective cattle", they believe it's manageable.
I'm not one that believes that all of the very best ones are carriers. I do believe that the entire beef industry would be better off without 'em, but they're obviously not going to disappear anytime soon. The great catastrophes that some were predicting to befall the whole industry tomorrow (if we didn't kill all the carriers, kill 'em tonight) were supposed to have happened last week, or maybe yesterday at the very latest, but they haven't happened yet... Apparently breeders are managing it somehow.
My personal opinion remains that every carrier bull from now on needs to get the knife, and the problem goes away. So far it's not working out that way, but all I can control are the cattle I manage, so that's all I'm losing sleep over.
The biggest problem I'm seeing now is this - the more of these defects that are being talked about and tested for, the less the average Joe cares about 'em. When sale catalogs are listing test results for three or more different defects, they start becoming just another footnote, and like listing 15 different epd's, they lose their impact on alot of folks.