librarian said:Just cruising around studying Canadian bulls. I think Duke of Dublin is a ringer for Theodore, or the other way around, not sure who came first.
justintime said:He came at the right time, but he would not be accepted as readily today.
Doc said:justintime said:He came at the right time, but he would not be accepted as readily today.
He might not be, but he sure made some good cows.
librarian said:Another part of the Great Canadian Wind Fence!
I would be really happy with a calf like that. Could you post a picture of the dam or one similar to the type you have found him to nick with.
Any feedback on Theo daughters?
Am I understanding that there is not a lot of predictability in Theodore offspring because he has a wide gene base? If he doesn't fix anything, is there something in particular that he adds?
I would address the same question to the Duke of Dublin.
Are these two bulls similar in frame size? (Duke and Theo)
And...Does anyone know the story on this bull, Weebollabolla Alderman
Photo Copyright: Weebollabolla Stud - Austrália
librarian said:Another part of the Great Canadian Wind Fence!
I would be really happy with a calf like that. Could you post a picture of the dam or one similar to the type you have found him to nick with.
justintime said:Here is a daughter of Theodore that we have in our herd. She is one of my favorite cows as she stays in this condition year round. She has a perfect udder and is fertile and very productive. She will enter our ET program after she calves this spring and I am selling a flush in her in our online "Frozen in Time" embryo and flush sale Jan 29th-30th.
If all Theodore daughters are like her, he is a great sire!~/// Jaime Diamond posted an older picture of a cow that went back to Deertrail Goliath that looks ALOT like this one-The cows at Deertrail back in the day also looked alot like this one as well-Although shes a good distance way in the picture. O0
Wow. That's a nice cow too. Looks a lot like my ideal.