I was wondering about this for a couple days now and its completely hypothetical. I will use my own horses as examples.
Say I owned a mare with a couple conformational faults (cow hocks for instance) and I was looking for a stallion to breed her to. My goal was to breed out the cow hocks and produce a foal with straighter legs than its dam. The mare in question inherited her cow hocks from her dam and that mare inherited her's from her dam. 3 generations of cow hocks; each sire with straighter legs than the mare he was bred to.
So, I have a goal to breed towards yet I'm looking for the right stallion conformationally.
Knowing what I do about the mare's female relatives (producing cow hocks) would it make sense to look for a stallion with a dam with straight legs and make sure he produces as such?
Obviously one would assume that it may take a couple generations. Another obvious fact would be to NOT breed the mare in the first place, but if somebody wanted to breed out the faults they could feel entitled to because they were hoping to produce a better foal than its parents. (or at least one)
I was seriously thinking about this last night because I do have a filly with cow hocks from her dam, who's dam also was cow hocked.
Like I said, hypothetical; I have no interest in breeding for at least 3-4 years in the future. I hope this made any sense because its past midnight and I'm tired...lol.
Say I owned a mare with a couple conformational faults (cow hocks for instance) and I was looking for a stallion to breed her to. My goal was to breed out the cow hocks and produce a foal with straighter legs than its dam. The mare in question inherited her cow hocks from her dam and that mare inherited her's from her dam. 3 generations of cow hocks; each sire with straighter legs than the mare he was bred to.
So, I have a goal to breed towards yet I'm looking for the right stallion conformationally.
Knowing what I do about the mare's female relatives (producing cow hocks) would it make sense to look for a stallion with a dam with straight legs and make sure he produces as such?
Obviously one would assume that it may take a couple generations. Another obvious fact would be to NOT breed the mare in the first place, but if somebody wanted to breed out the faults they could feel entitled to because they were hoping to produce a better foal than its parents. (or at least one)
I was seriously thinking about this last night because I do have a filly with cow hocks from her dam, who's dam also was cow hocked.
Like I said, hypothetical; I have no interest in breeding for at least 3-4 years in the future. I hope this made any sense because its past midnight and I'm tired...lol.