Yes, some ranchers say that, don't shoot the messenger.
I apologize if you felt I was shooting the messenger. That was not my intent.
Here I go, prepare to crucify me, but I am not alone when I say, I'd rather put down 4 chins than grow them, care for them, and spend money on xrays every 6 months to a year to see if they might be developing malo. and so on, that is money I could be spending on healthy animals.
But from all you know, those are healthy animals.
why would they want to even GIVE someone a chin knowing it has over a 50% chance of dying before 5 years with a broken hearted family who's probably spent THOUSANDS, yes THOUSANDS to care for until it's in so much pain they put it to sleep, or worry that they won't be cared for adn suffer.
I was under the impression that it wasn't known what the percentages were for a kit from a line where one malo case has shown up to get malo. Is the "over a 50% chance" a known figure?
Linda you say you "just want to learn" but then you argue with what people say. What I do, is not what you do, and none of it might be what other people do. Many people, people with tons of knowledge and years and years of experience don't come to the forums because they don't want to put up with people telling them they are wrong, or what they do is wrong, or it's bad that they pelt, or that they put down a whole line of malo chins " on the chance they'll develop it to". All of this knowledge is not gained because some people can't accept that their way is not the only way, nor is it always the right way.
I'm not trying to argue. I know there will be people with different breeding philosophies. I have developed mine over the course of many years of breeding for show. You will have developed yours, and others will have developed theirs. And hopefully you're not attributing all of those problems to what I'm saying. I have no problem with people who pelt chins. It doesn't mean I would ever do it, but I don't have problems with those who do.
Another thread discussed what a rancher is, a rancher is this. They don't spend a lot to keep one chin alive when they can't use it, that is the business aspect of it. Sometimes it's not about one chin... sometimes it's about all the chins, the betterment of the breed.
I am all for betterment of the breed. As a matter of fact, that is my main goal as a breeder. I don't understand how putting down kits and/or adults from malo lines who show no signs of malo has anything to do with betterment of the breed. If anything, I would think that understanding how many kits or adults develop malo from such situations might actually help the breed. And I am absolutely not against putting down a chin with malo. Once malo shows up, it's an entirely different situation.
Linda