Missouri | I've generally had better luck reintroducing the older piece of the line back on top of the fresh part of the line. Seems like the line stays more consistent when I do it that way. In some cases the older piece of the line is more rare, or expensive, so using it in a flush on the newer piece of the line allows me to get more bang for the buck out of the amp. I'm not sure how expensive 31 is anymore though, so it might not be all that rare.
Some would argue that you should always be making progress and using such an old piece of the line would be moving backwards. Different strokes for different folks, I suppose.
One thing I do know is when you cross this line bred Angus line with a certain line bred Shorthorn line, magic happens and the females live forever.
Edited by beanplanter 2/17/2019 17:45
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