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<blockquote data-quote="BSK" data-source="post: 5051150" data-attributes="member: 17"><p>Finding unique peak breeding dates is always interesting. Sometimes deciphering the reasons for those unique dates is easy, such as the unique dates for South Florida (July and August), South Texas (mid-December), and the coastal regions of GA and the Carolinas (late September). But other times, like the weird dates of AL and MS, is a mystery.</p><p></p><p>Why is peak breeding the earliest for northcentral and central Middle TN and then gets later the farther south and west you go? I have no idea. I can't imagine what factors makes a peak breeding a few weeks earlier in central/northern Middle TN such an advantage versus a few weeks later just 50 miles south and west. I didn't include Eastern TN breeding dates because they appear to be a hodge-podge of localized peak dates for different environments, considering the Plateau and Eastern Mountains.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BSK, post: 5051150, member: 17"] Finding unique peak breeding dates is always interesting. Sometimes deciphering the reasons for those unique dates is easy, such as the unique dates for South Florida (July and August), South Texas (mid-December), and the coastal regions of GA and the Carolinas (late September). But other times, like the weird dates of AL and MS, is a mystery. Why is peak breeding the earliest for northcentral and central Middle TN and then gets later the farther south and west you go? I have no idea. I can't imagine what factors makes a peak breeding a few weeks earlier in central/northern Middle TN such an advantage versus a few weeks later just 50 miles south and west. I didn't include Eastern TN breeding dates because they appear to be a hodge-podge of localized peak dates for different environments, considering the Plateau and Eastern Mountains. [/QUOTE]
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