Unfortunately, an all blood chart is not possibly with most of the top Genealogy Programs. At one time 2 program were able to produce them or by feeding the proper information into an All-In One Chart they could be created. Now I think there is only one program left and it has not been updated for 4-5 years. Some printing services will print these charts for you as well.
They are great for family reunions, others can see what relatives are giving you info, and see which relative branches are bare. Other similar charts although not a blood chart, is documenting a village. You can view what you have and even the branches you have not been able to connect to the main portion of the tree. If you do want to get a blood relative tree and have a 3rd party print it out, lets say for you. do the following. Select yourself Then find your direct-line ancestors with no parents tag each. Now create a descendant tree for each of those ancestors, and tag the descendants. Save the tagged individuals as a gedcom to send to a 3rd party print company or if others create the ability to make All-In-One Charts you can shove you data there. Remember to exclude spouses, if it's a pure blood tree. If you keep the spouses you have another unique tree which will probably create a really huge tree. Then have it all printed. These are the people you've documented related to you via blood (or at least have a high probability to being blood related to you). Viewing these charts allows you to then see who might be potential candidates to sign up for genealogy tests so you can fill in some of blanks for those ancestors of yours that did not pass the DNA down to you. The blood relative tree is a unique type of tree. In nature this type of tree exists in Hawaii and is called the Banyan Tree where the tree has multiple trucks that are interconnected via the branches, similar to you and your blood relatives. A blood tree is like having multiple descendant trees interconnected based on a single individual starting point. Each of your cousins blood trees will be unique to them and their siblings. On 9/12/2011 2:11 AM, Terry Foxcroft wrote: > An all blood relatives chart. > > This is what I am craving! > > Terry > > > From: poo...@ozemail.com.au > > To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com > > Subject: RE: [LegacyUG] Chart Printing > > Date: Mon, 12 Sep 2011 11:28:02 +1000 > > > > But if the OP wants “ALL†of uncle’s genealogy does she also want > those who came before him i.e. his ancestors? If she wants both she > needs a different chart and right now my chemo brain has completely > forgotten what it is called but as far as I know Legacy doesn’t > provide for this type of chart. Not sure about Legacy Charting. > > > > Becky Malmo > > Fresno, CA > > > > > Legacy User Group guidelines: > http://www.LegacyFamilyTree.com/Etiquette.asp > Archived messages after Nov. 21 2009: > http://www.mail-archive.com/legacyusergroup@legacyusers.com/ > Archived messages from old mail server - before Nov. 21 2009: > http://www.mail-archive.com/legacyusergroup@legacyfamilytree.com/ > Online technical support: http://www.LegacyFamilyTree.com/Help.asp > Follow Legacy on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/LegacyFamilyTree) > and on our blog (http://news.LegacyFamilyTree.com). > To unsubscribe: http://www.LegacyFamilyTree.com/LegacyLists.asp Legacy User Group guidelines: http://www.LegacyFamilyTree.com/Etiquette.asp Archived messages after Nov. 21 2009: http://www.mail-archive.com/legacyusergroup@legacyusers.com/ Archived messages from old mail server - before Nov. 21 2009: http://www.mail-archive.com/legacyusergroup@legacyfamilytree.com/ Online technical support: http://www.LegacyFamilyTree.com/Help.asp Follow Legacy on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/LegacyFamilyTree) and on our blog (http://news.LegacyFamilyTree.com). To unsubscribe: http://www.LegacyFamilyTree.com/LegacyLists.asp