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Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Just Clearing Some Things Up

Over the past several years I've entertained various questions about goats in general. What is sometimes surprising is the source of these questions. Independent of the 'asker's' upbringing, level of education completed and family life, we've fielded some real doozies! As expected, when placing sale ads for animals you sometimes attract some questionable characters.

I'm looking for a billy goat to milk.  I'm going to tie it to my porch so it can play with my dogs and share their food. When will it start making milk?

There are some strict criteria for even getting an email back from me. 1. Grammar and punctuation (or lack thereof) should be, at least, marginally acceptable. 2. If you can't afford gas to get the goats, or to fix your car to get the goats, or pay to register the goats, you can't feed the goats and certainly can't provide appropriate veterinary care when necessary. 3. Don't ask me for a champion milker producing 2 gallons a day and expect to pay only $75. 4. Be a responsible animal owner. Buy a book. When purchasing goats, don't ask me 'what do they eat?' And don't seem surprised that a ruminant requires hay. And don't expect it to mow your lawn, they really don't care for grass.Those are the big ones.



Then there are the questions we field over and over again. Some you expect, because I, too, was raised without any general knowledge of farming or livestock and probably asked some of these same questions before. Some are just silly.
Will goats eat anything? Even tin cans?

They really prefer pizza. In Manhattan. 



Mine like 'Cool Ranch' flavor better.
But truly, they're really damn picky. High quality alfalfa hay - sneak in some older bales and they promptly pick through it and toss it on the floor. Once on the ground you may as well call it 'bedding' because they wouldn't touch it with a ten foot pole unless they were on the verge of starvation. They prefer leafy things over grass, ie clover, weeds over most grasses. There is truth in that they are excellent brush clearing tools and will plow through thistle, ragweed, poison ivy and multiflora rose. But remember, you are what you eat, or in this case, the milk tastes like the food source. Let me tell you, ragweed does not taste so good in my coffee, and this is why goats milk gets a bad name - poor dietary management. And please, adult male in Delaware last year, my goats don't want your greasy fair fries. Nor do they want the cup from your lemon shake. Next time I'll feed goat berries to your kid...



Our first year with goats, I lovingly chopped up some extra veggies from the garden only to have the little buggers snub me, one by one. Some are more daring than others, they generally like sweet potatoes, apples, raisins, carrots, sweeter things, kind of like us human types. Squash, corn, bananas, cucumbers, legumes are hit or miss. Tin cans, paper, plastic and baling twine (dangerous!) are definitely not on the menu.

Ewwww...you drink goats milk??

No, we work our butts off then dump it in the lawn. Of course we drink it! When  you take the care to make sure you feed the animals properly, strain out any hair or debris and just be 'clean', it tastes great. We've slipped it past many an unadventurous palate and many children without a fight. I won't go on about the health benefits and ease of digestion, it can be easily googled. And its getting late. 

Where do they poop?

Goat berries. Compact, neat, little, if any odor. No piles of stanky manure here... (not my hand, by the way)

This one caught me off guard. Ummm, on the ground? 'You mean, they just lay in it?' Yes. 'Well don't you milk them?' Yes, aaaand? 'And you drink it after they've been lying around in shit all day?' Newsflash - you do too!!! No milk is 'born' at the grocery store.

So are the ones with the beards boys? Why don't they have horns?

All goats get beards. we just prefer to clip the girls to make them look prettier. The boys look more masculine with their beards plus it gives them a media to decorate with their own urine during rut. Who are we to deny them the pleasure of shaking their pungent, soaked flowing beards? We remove the horns for safety, theirs and ours. Not pleasant for either of us but it is responsible animal husbandry. Don't call me cruel. Cruel is having a horned goat trapped in an electric fence or letting horns tear through your herdmates udders.

Look at that belly- she is pregnant right?

A big, wide belly is evidence of a large, healthy rumen, the goats fermentation vat to process their food. Pregnant goats can sometimes require a 'wide load' sign and are just gigundous. Others hardly look pregnant at all, even with multiples.

Well I still think she's pregnant...

Nope, definitely not. Those are her kids right over there. 

Are you sure you got them all?

Yes, positive. She's fine. 

Well, her udder is really full, it looks like it hurts, you should probably milk her.

Milking time is in 3 hours. That is a normal appearing udder, she is a productive milker, I assure you, she is fine. 

Whoa, look at the udder on that one, it must be sick!

Uh, that's a buck.


So in review...........................

Don't worry, it won't eat the whole thing. Maybe just the handle.

Well, it looks the same, so hair must be just as good as hay.

Fingers are very nutritious and the meat makes for excellent butterfat content in the milk.

Please! Help me outta here! He tried to milk my scrotum again!

Monday, April 23, 2012

Earth Day

Ok, I admit I had no clue it was Earth Day until I saw the news last night. But it was fitting, we spent the whole day plowing, moving, grinding and remodeling...the Earth!


This is a newly plowed field in back of our house. Its a small area, in the past we've cultivated nothing more than ragweed in this area which causes me much misery each fall. This is where we spread a lot of our goat manure after cleaning stalls, so, theoretically at least, the soil should be great. We have big hopes for a small area of sweet corn, squash (to keep it from taking over our main garden), melons, kale (for the goats) and pumpkins. After having my first pumpkin success last year the dreams are getting bigger. Rog asked me- what are we going to do with all these pumpkins? I asked - how are we going to keep all that weeded sufficiently? Should be a disaster...


We also are trying to finish up our feeder hog pen. The project was aborted when the sheet metal for the roof started blowing away and we decided it wasn't important enough to risk decapitation. So, yes, we are getting piggies...since we don't have enough to do already. But piggies will drink a lot of milk that would otherwise get dumped in the lawn, they will eat a lot of pumpkins (a natural pig de-wormer, I learned) and they taste really good...

Mmmmm...bacon

Partially finished pig house. Strategically placed on the southeast corner of our property so we cannot smell them!
We also did some bee management this week. Rog installed the observation hive at the park and also successfully captured a swarm in our backyard and has installed it into a new hive for our apiary. The early spring has made for busy bees...the hives are already loaded with honey and young bees. We may be splitting more hives sooner than we think.

Hmmm... why does he always do these projects when I'm wearing black?

Bursting with joy

It's a big day here at Capra Lane. Bigger than the new tractor...bigger than having 4 does kidding simultaneously...bigger than putting away the dehorning iron for the year...bigger than having everyone finally learn the milking order...

We have DSL!



We have (kind of) entered the 21st century in Adario! Seriously, you people that are blessed with civilization have no idea how frustrating the last 6 years have been. We have spent fortunes on long distance(!) dial-up. We've suffered with $85 a month satellite "high-speed" internet that went out with the rain, snow, wind, clouds, birds, butterflies and really wasn't any faster than dial-up. And Richard Branson can suck it. Virgin Mobile's Mifi device will be the subject of my next target shooting practice. We've had it for about a year, delicately balanced on our windowsill to catch a signal, moving it in various locations through the house. It worked well for a few months, just enough to suck me into a contract, then it would flick on, flick off, freeze up and made checking email a 30-60 minute process. Countless 'trouble tickets', replacement devices and failed customer service calls later and I'm happy to kiss the damn thing goodbye.


So, the Ontario office staff of Century Link are now my heroes. The corporate office had been giving us the run around for the past 5 years or so as to why our neighbors have DSL but we are too far from the home office. So thank you, to the sales rep and tech guy that thought this seemed as stupid as I did. It took a few weeks to sort out the logistics but it is finally in place.





 Hopefully no more bouts of wanting to go 'Office Space' on my computer in the near future. Who am I fooling??? I was close to shooting it almost every day. Looking forward to getting some work done at home and not having to drive 30 minutes to Panera or Starbucks to use their WiFi and buy expensive coffee. We finally get to discover YouTube in more than 5 second buffered intervals. Maybe I can download an Ipad app without letting it run overnight or try to use ITunes to its full potential. The possibilities are endless. And do you know how long it took to upload the photos on this post?? Just as long as it took to take a sip of coffee...amazing! Maybe since blog posts are no longer an all-day affair I'll get my ass in gear and update more frequently....

Yep, even this guy beat us to the punch.