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This is backwards from my way of thinking (not meaning that I am right), but I would think to work on desired traits first and only once they have been achieved worry about the SOP. (Understanding that desired traits and SOP often are in agreement.)
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One might also ask: why cull less than perfect chickens when they are so endangered? Better a few imperfect examples than one perfect example. (Of course, no one will ever achieve perfection.)
I'm not suggesting ignoring the SOP. Suppose I have six roosters and will only be keeping one. I would look at the traits that are most important to me. When the decision is close, I would look to SOP traits that I was not initially considering.
This is backwards from my way of thinking (not meaning that I am right), but I would think to work on desired traits first and only once they have been achieved worry about the SOP. (Understanding that desired traits and SOP often are in agreement.)
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One might also ask: why cull less than perfect chickens when they are so endangered? Better a few imperfect examples than one perfect example. (Of course, no one will ever achieve perfection.)
I'm not suggesting ignoring the SOP. Suppose I have six roosters and will only be keeping one. I would look at the traits that are most important to me. When the decision is close, I would look to SOP traits that I was not initially considering.