Wednesday, 25 May 2011

SHOW

Making the final preparations for Tregaron Goat Show this week. It is held on Sat/Sun & includes a milking competition. We are not expecting to do very well as the competition is quite high from exhibitors who have been showing for many years & have goats of a very high standard......but we all have to start somewhere!
We are showing two milkers, a goatling & a kid. We arrive at the show on Saturday & have to milk the goats empty at about  6pm & then bed them down for the night. We then start very early the next day with an udder inspection & then milking which is recorded & samples taken to be analysed. The other goats are then shown for the various classes & prizes awarded. About 6pm the goats are milked & recorded again & the winners are announced. This is quite a simplified version of events but it give an idea of what happens. During the rest of the day we admire everyone elses goats & wonder why ours dont have udders that big!!
It is good to keep these shows going in order to promote the breeds if nothing else; too many shows have folded & there does not seem to be the interest in goats any longer which is a real shame. I am fully aware that alot of keepers are put off by the ever-increasing price of feed along with all of the regulations controlling disease, but all hobbies are expensive & come with a list of rules & still have support. Goat keeping aswell as being a pleasure can provide quite a degree of self sufficiency & you do not need lots of land to keep a pair of goats. I think it will be a great loss if goat keeping declines any further. Trying to encourage young people is really important.

Wednesday, 18 May 2011

NEWS!

Both of the crossbred nannie kids have gone to a new home which is really good; the billy however is still with us if anyone is interested in him....he is a really nice,easy to handle boy. The little British Alpine kid has now been registered with the British Goat Society as: Tangarn Bronte & will be off to some shows this year, the first of which being Tregaron Goat Show on May 28/29th. I have also entered her mum in the milking competition, Bramwell who is a goatling now, and  Anglo-nubian milker( Patch or Guneryhite Bhangra!). Hopefully we will do well! The kid will have to be worked with to get her to walk & stand correctly but she is very sweet natured so i do not think she will be too much trouble.
All the goats were tested for CAE last week which is Caprine Arthritis Encephalitis & they are all Negative which is really good news. CAE is a virus which is highly contagious & kids can catch it from older goats.It becomes evident in kids in the form of paralysis but in older goats as arthritis which obviously will cause a lot of pain & usually death. All goats have to have this test done before they can be shown at a BGS recognised show & also most other shows will put non-tested goats in seperate areas so that goats do not come into contact with infected ones.
We are really keeping our fingers crossed that Danaa kids on the 20th May or close to as we have had disasters with two of the goats not turning out to be in kid! It was quite difficult to tell with Annie who is a goatling,which means that she has never had a kid yet; she has always had quite a round stomach which was deceptive.She did not return to service after her mating so we hoped she would have kids....better luck next time! Snowdrop, who is an 8 year old milker, also should have been in kid & wasnt. Alot of goat keepers have their goats scanned but this is just another expense in an ever increasing invoice!!
I really have high hopes for Danaa as she really is a very well grown goatling who did quite well last year the couple of times we did show her. She has got a very good pedigree & hopefully will produce good stock.
I shall post again when she has kidded!
Please take a look at this link for some further information on goat keeping http://www.allgoats.com/
This is Strudel who was rehomed by us; she had once been savaged by a dog which ripped her throat & left her with bad scaring. She is a Saanen x boar goat which is why she is so chunky! 

Thursday, 5 May 2011

Hernia

On Tuesday,our one kid who i have called "Bat ears" as she is an Anglo nubian x Alpine,had to have an operation as she had a hernia. It was an umbilical hernia as the naval had not closed properly after birth. She will be left with a bit of a lump but otherwise will be fine in the long term.
We are waiting for Snowdrop,our Anglo-nubian nannie to kid. She is 8 years old & is a really sweet girl. She was due today which is 150 days since service but can go another 5 without a problem.
We also have Annie due on the 10th.
The kids from Kenya who we lost with mastitis are doing really well; they like to go outside on the yard now for a run around.
Madelaine, the pygmy is huge & she is not due to kid for a long time. She does look really funny with two great saddles on her sides! She never has any problems kidding but quickly loses interest in the kids; i think she has had so many she gets bored!

This is Madelaine with one of her kids last year.