Now that right there is common, horse smart. If you keep using arguments that are just too logical, you'll have sit at the back of the class mister.... Very good point. Bill
Quote:
If they have the origanal lines they have to be terribly inbred after 30-50 years and if they are not inbred ( introduced new blood ) then they do not have the " origanal " line LOL
Unless they introduced a new blood line with another of the same line.
Of someone elses bloodline, breeders selected by someone else, etc. Both lines originating from the same bloodlines.
Just like chickens, the blood line can be crossed with its own but owned and selected by another. Because everyone makes different choices in the breeders. That is why trading birds or eggs can work to continue a blood line. Buckeye, RIR, NHR, etc. etc.
That is why they put markers in the meat birds. So people could tell one from another. (Ha, I thought I had thought of something new, they were decades ahead of me).
I imagine that is why the A&M Whites really have the dot on the heads. The Browns had the Beige or another mutation added depending on which country you were in. Problem is the birds started mutating and changing. So, now we can't be sure, I don't think they thought this would happen.
Yes, I have a study to back these statements up.
Quote:
If they have the origanal lines they have to be terribly inbred after 30-50 years and if they are not inbred ( introduced new blood ) then they do not have the " origanal " line LOL
Unless they introduced a new blood line with another of the same line.
Of someone elses bloodline, breeders selected by someone else, etc. Both lines originating from the same bloodlines.
Just like chickens, the blood line can be crossed with its own but owned and selected by another. Because everyone makes different choices in the breeders. That is why trading birds or eggs can work to continue a blood line. Buckeye, RIR, NHR, etc. etc.
That is why they put markers in the meat birds. So people could tell one from another. (Ha, I thought I had thought of something new, they were decades ahead of me).
I imagine that is why the A&M Whites really have the dot on the heads. The Browns had the Beige or another mutation added depending on which country you were in. Problem is the birds started mutating and changing. So, now we can't be sure, I don't think they thought this would happen.
Yes, I have a study to back these statements up.
Those first english whites had that dot on their head.......no marker just none always breed true white.....I did have some ablino (pink eyes) all white birds in the 60s Don't know if any are still out there.
I'm not really going to quote anyone here, but if you have 19oz. all white meat coturnix....I'll trade you my bridge in Brooklyn, NY. for a few dozen eggs!
Joe better save the bridge, for the birds , you know if eggs hatch ......they will not all(none) take after the parents ,thats alway the story on those or you didn't feed them right.