Olive Hill,
I understand what you're saying. We keep commercial Toulouse for sales of day-old goslings, eggs, and table birds to offset piddling around with breeding the Buffs.
I grew up on a DHIA dairy farm in upstate NY with registered stock. That was back when small family farms were common and there was a different approach to farming. I'm no stranger to maintaining accurate "herd records", either. I confess that I retain that same "small farm" mentality (and dairy language). Two of us work this 15 acres full-time with the full knowledge that we will never make money at it. One of us is working under duress. We're just starting out. Everyone starts somewhere. And it's Texas. And they are geese....Actually we didn't go into this with the idea of becoming breeders (only one of us), and after we spent the first year "keeping geese", we've transitioned to "managing geese'. Would you consider mentoring? You have obviously much more experience than I. Words are cold and I want you to know that I sincerely do not intend to come across as contentious or facetious. "Insert olive branch emoticon here" Selective breeding is not an overnight endeavor in any species.
My idea of excess ganders and yours may be different. I started with that: 5 each, 2 of which are already out. We only got 2 geese (7 total). Right there we had a problem with excess. And we are wading with a very shallow gene pool indeed, my friend, if I do say so myself. My toenails aren't even damp! We didn't have adequate initial female resources to draw from. We made our own. The second generation had a good number of really beautiful geese, but they were mostly too small by the standard, and we kept no ganders. This past spring we got more of each to choose from, some improvement and some will be culls. Market's better in the spring! We sell the culls as crosses. We do cull, but we also need some new blood. I wouldn't call it willy-nilly, either, just too close for comfort at the 3rd generation. I now have 20 females, out of which I must cull 3 for faults, and possibly 3 more if we gain nothing from them this year.
Let me ask you this: How long do you feel is an appropriate length of time before you can accurately gauge what traits a particular gander (or goose) is going to reliably pass along before you say "He (or she)'s out!!!"? Do you give him another chance to breed with an alternative goose/gander with complimentary traits? I got 4 potential keepers for ganders this past year. They look good, but will they produce? Won't know that until it happens and half of that will depend on who they mate with. Overall, the ratio isn't bad, but linebreeding only goes so far. We've improved what we started with. The question is: Can we realistically develop a line of our own and maintain it without going "outside"? I don't think so. It sure didn't work with cattle. We had 2 herd sires for 100 cows and we used AI as well, and that was before breeding SuperCows became fashionable. Haven't seen that option open yet. I'm not a geneticist, and don't have a class nearby available. I'm just trying to interpret the standard against what I've got. That's why we've decided to get the birds out and show them to someone who better knows how to apply the standard.
Forgive me, I have a strange and often misunderstood sense of humor. I worked for the Government far too long: I'm just not right. PM me if you would like to expound or offer guidance. I think the forum may not be the appropriate place to continue the discussion. I would have sent you a private message, but did not want to intrude. Thank you! Bracing for another temperature roller coaster tonight here. At least it will not be sustained freezing temperatures this time. We didn't even get any mail delivery here last Tue-Fri. Never had that happen before! Every available grain of sand and "salt substitute" in this state went to the roads in and around the Superbowl. God bless us, every one!