tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7417293650054875861.post8392075627982950091..comments2024-03-14T12:15:28.809-04:00Comments on Moments in Time, A Genealogy Blog: I Wish for More Tools at AncestryDNADiana Bryan Quinnhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06521255159406655518noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7417293650054875861.post-36003322831037263032012-12-30T17:38:57.312-05:002012-12-30T17:38:57.312-05:00Thanks!I looked earlier - my mother and I each hav...Thanks!I looked earlier - my mother and I each have 58 pages of matches and my aunt has 60. One could say that I was lucky to have so many matches:) I started an easy to use spread sheet to help me determine matches within my family, but the numbers are just too large. I think that I will wait to see what happens in 2013!Diana Bryan Quinnhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06521255159406655518noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7417293650054875861.post-2322459626533178212012-12-30T16:57:49.926-05:002012-12-30T16:57:49.926-05:00Wow! You really do have tons of matches. So far I ...Wow! You really do have tons of matches. So far I have only eight pages of matches! And none of my close relatives has tested with Ancestry. After I created a pedigree tree and connected it, about 6-8 of my matches show the leaf (probably because I included "reputed" connections way out there). For the rest of the approximately 40 matches where I think I may have spotted the connection, I used names, dates, and spouses' names on my matches' trees to figure out the connections - but that's a lot easier to do with less than 400 matches. I wish you good luck in figuring out a system for managing this large body of information!Greta Koehlhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05429623811794360612noreply@blogger.com