Rose of Sharon family and Baron Victor

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librarian

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It's iinteresting to learn that the Rosabell family derived from Rose of Sharon bred bulls. So, a pedigree like this would, in its winding way, go back to the Rose of Sharon cows?
 

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Okotoks

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librarian said:
It's iinteresting to learn that the Rosabell family derived from Rose of Sharon bred bulls. So, a pedigree like this would, in its winding way, go back to the Rose of Sharon cows?
In the maternal line Roasabell 302 back through her maternal grandam Rosabell 170th would be a direct descendant of Rose of Sharon. Plus in just this 4 generation pedigree she has three other direct descendants of Rose of Sharon. Rosa's Command 91 with two crosses, Commander Plus 88 twice. If you go back further there are more crosses like Lilac Commander 89 goes back to Rosabell 100! Even the the Par Defender way back in the pedigree goes back through Sharon Magnet to Rosabell 8.
 

librarian

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Thanks Okotoks-that's really neat.
The original post was an article about mating the imported bull Baron Victor- a red Cruickshank bull born in 1880- with Rose of Sharon cows with good results.
So, since we are on older Shorthorn genetics, etc, I'll say that one of those most regrettable vanishing characters in Shorthorns, to me- is the old purple roan color. I've been studying a lot about color genetics and understand now that the wild type recessive extention allele e+ when combined with roan gives purple roan...or can give if everything lines up that way. My interest in old style Shorthorn genetics kind of went off the deep end all the way to Galloway and I still believe restoration of the beef type imported to Canada from Scotland would involve a reintroduction of Galloway percentage. 1/8 would suffice. Anyway, in Galloway cattle- or a debatably pure strain of Riggit Galloway cattle accused of being tainted with Shorthorn- there are combinations of alleles of roan and color sided genes along with the extension genes ...and their wild types. Here is a photo of a Galloway bull with an unusual expression of all those combinations. He would have Color Sided, Roan and the black version of the extension gene, wild type- or not, because he is a shade of black instead of a shade of red. BUT, what I'm getting at- is imagine he had the wild type red allele instead of black? He'd be purple roan and look an awful lot like Clipper King of Bapton. Not many would fail to confuse him with one of those Bapton type Shorthorns imported to Australia, South America and Canada in the late 1800's. I'm saying all this because of what Medium Rare said about the ridiculously deep bodied Canadian cows. We see it all the time in good Galloway cows and it seems very heritable. I don't see a huge difference between attempting to breed back to these voluminous traits thru embryo transplants from antique Shorthorn genetics or through using a good contemporary Red Galloway bull from Alberta. Not expecting agreement...just a heads up to those who like that body type.
 

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librarian

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I always admired this Rosabell on the DMH page. Or, back when I admired big cows more than I do now. She also looks more like the really good old Milking Shorthorns than anything else. I think they were pretty big cows.
 

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beebe

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I am glad you like her, I like her to.  That is why she is here.  I will get a calf out of her this fall from an Albaugh bull.  I have one more embryo from that mating.  She is running with Max now.
 

mark tenenbaum

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Yes that Haumont cow looks like the old 1900s milkers but more modern as such in her overall balance and certainely better structured-the 2000 -2800 YES 2800 pound cows Harold Hoskins and Deertrail had went from the Dual herds that never got mixed with much like the Marvel cows-they were massive but not as deep as this one-The hilltop cows- were much harder doing looking and dual looking and had Saleers in them . When they were mated to the Irish cattle and Maines-the growth and scale on some was just incredible-and it was hard to believe that it happened so fast, Arguably one of the biggest cows on the North American continent in the late 80s-early 90s was Deertrail Lasting Impression-she was almost as tall as Deertrail Awesome who was gigantic and over 3000 pounds in good rig - he was even bigger than bulls like Grubbs Mckensie-Lasting Impression weighed at LEAST 2700 pounds-She was sired by Overtime-a solid red VERY stout (for that time) full irish sib to BBS Primetime and out of a normal sized cow She was not big at birth-she just kept growing and growing..She was a freak of nature and there were quite a few around like that. Though none of her calves were big at all including a bull balf by Awesome-If you see photos from Ireland in the 1860 s  of 6 foot tall Shorthorns that would be part of it-In general there are some VERY freaky growth curves back in the bushes with certain Shorthorn Strains O0
 

r.n.reed

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Yes Dan the heifer pictured above is a double bred Frontline and since her sire is Double Brute she has 3 shots of 26a close up in her pedigree. Most of my cattle are red but a few roans turn up and I am not ashamed of that, even thinking about keeping a roan bull calf  to use here.The pedigree Librarian posted above is  my Rosa's Command's 05 bull.He is the last herd bull I have purchased.  Mary Bell Cooksley gave me the pick of her bull calves back in 2005.He sired a few influential females here including the dam of Frontline.I have attached her picture standing next to a very good Canadian bull out at Paint Valley.
The Librarian brought up the Lavender Roan color and I must confess I don't get out much but I have only seen that lavender color in the Haumont cattle.
 

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yuppiecowboy

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my dad (oldhorn) who passed last October had quite a few "purple roans" over the years and his cow herd was heavy with Hultine and Haumont breeding. I really hadnt thought of it until the Librarian brought it up but you just dont see that deep, purplish roan anymore do you....?
 

Okotoks

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Isn't that heifer posted above by Medium Rare a purple roan especially later when she's in winter coat?
I consider the Supreme Champion All Breeds bull and Grand Champion at Agribition, Hill Haven Fire Storm, a purple roan as well as Diamond Minnie Blossom 43B posted here.
Maybe I have a different definition of "purple" roan.
 

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librarian

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The color in those pictures is what I think of when I think of purple roan. I think maybe/probably the Maine infusion made that wild type red allele less common or overwhelmed it. That wild type coloration in red becomes darker during breeding season. I think this Lincoln red shows the deep Shorthorn color that when mixed with white makes the old fashioned roan.
Here it is on a Galloway, but you see the nose is not black. I have seen Shorthorn cows with very dark hair on their muzzles ear tips...that would be the sign of the wild type red. I've also seen this color on Luing bulls.
I am using the example of Mulberry coloration inheritance in Longhorn cattle for my wild red assumptions...not trying to say it's an absolute fact about wild type red...but did also read it in a genetics book in regard to Shorthorns
 

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yuppiecowboy

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firestorm is a purple roan. the heifer pictured above him is too. the last one is a strawberry roan. the red bull pictured is what it think of as a dark shorthorn red as aposed to a red angus red or a limi red or any other breed red.I guarantee Lonny, Grant, RN Reed etc could pick a red shorthorn bull out of 1000 red hided other breed bulls quicker than i can fry an egg.
 

yuppiecowboy

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librarian is that Clipper King of Bapton you have pictured????? My first question is why the heck would I know that second is where the heck did you find a picture of him????
 

librarian

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Sorry to hear of oldhorn's passing. I enjoyed his posts and learned from his point of view.
 

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RyanChandler

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Purple roan.  Firestorm is the only one pictured above that looks like what I think of as a purple roan.  The only purple roans I see are those that have some Maine influence either via the Irish imports or fullbloods.  Pictured is the only purple roan I’ve raised: XBAR Exodus.     
 

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yuppiecowboy

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Librarian: thank you for your condolences. He was ready to go home. I miss him of course but I take great consolation in that I got to spend sincere quality time with him at the end and nearly a hundred years is plenty for anyone.

Xbar: yep. thats a purple roan. You saw it out of Maine influence? That surprises me.
 

oakview

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I always thought of Columbus as sort of a purple roan, at least as much or more than some of the photos shown.  Many of us old timers remember Steve Torgerson's "black nosed Pearl", a Clark daughter that did a lot of winning, can it really be 40 years ago?  I remember reading about a bull named Calrossie Randolph, perhaps in "Red, White, and Roan."  It seems as though the passage said that he was a very good bull, but was not quite as popular as he could have been because of his near black color.  I have seen several descendants of Red Advantage that have that lighter shade of red color (also scurs) along with some Rodeo Drives.  The grand kids showed a home raised heifer at the county fair that was extremely dark red, when its nearly dark, she could almost pass for black at a distance.
 

librarian

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I had a book of letters written by Amos Cruikshank that describes many of his shipments of cattle from Scotland to America. Most in demand for bulls was red and he would comment sometimes that he sent a few dark roans. I think of this bull calf out of Weston Dynamo as a dark roan. This other picture is just one I had saved...don't know who he is or where he is, but he's my idea of a purple roan. The color Xbar mentioned that came in with the Irish cattle seemed, to me, almost more of a brown...like what you see in English Longhorns...not the purple color.
 

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oakview

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To me, both of those bulls are dark roan. I suppose "purple" is in the eyes of the beholder.  My full Irish bull, Lazy D Ultimate Type, was a roan redneck and the red was a perfect red, not light red, not yellow, not black.  He was identical in color to many of the Leader 21 descendants we raised prior to that.  The Leader 9th influence I am using now also throws a lot of roan rednecks.  I don't remember seeing too many off color Irish Shorthorns, other than the white legs and spots, which also came with the Maines and Duals.   
 
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