Grassfarmer said:Yanuck said:The eight carcass
specifications developed in
1978 still have the same effect on black
cattle. Cattle with less Angus influence
are less likely to make the cut. With just
one out of five or six Angus-influence
cattle meeting CAB carcass
requirements, the only sure way to have
success is to go with carcass-proven
Angus progeny.
Despite the incentives to use
selective breeding, specifications for the
brand have never required a certain
percentage of Angus in a calf's pedigree.
The U.S. cattle herd is primarily
crossbred, and CAB was built on the
proven fact that Angus-sired calves from
those cows do a great job of hitting the
brand's target.
At face value, the CAB mission is to
increase demand for registered Angus
cattle. But, in light of the demanding
quality specifications, the brand has a
more positive effect on the value of those
Angus cattle with above average carcass
genetics. The idea was to create a valuebased
market for the cattle that bring
consumers a quality eating experience.
http://www.angusbeefbulletin.com/ArticlePDF/ABB1004_CAB%20Link.pdf
We worked for Fred Johnson for a number of yrs, he was one of several who were the driving force behind CAB, when the program started it didn't go so well and the AAA was going to scrap it, Fred offered to buy it outright, they decided to keep trying, and obviously suceeded...just a little more useless trivia for you Dylan!! :wink:
Aren't those two statements rather contradictory :?
talk to the fellow that wrote them!!