Looks Saanen to me. Of course, ours has different horns, as you could see on my avatar. Do some research on the breed, specifically on their horns, since they don't seem to "match" with your other goat's horns.
How does horn growth and castration time correlate?Rex said:Definately some sort of meat breed in there. I can also tell you he was castrated late by looking at the mass of the horns.
Hmmm, good observation Rex. I do think that there are exceptions to that logic though. I have an alpine wether that I castrated (in my opinion too young) at 3 days old. His horn base and mass is at least 2x the size of my other goats. Deffinately an exception to the rule. You are right that most times the horn size is a good indication of how old the goat was when castrated, but my boy would deceive even the text books.Rex said:Definately some sort of meat breed in there. I can also tell you he was castrated late by looking at the mass of the horns.
We have done several side by side comparisons on different kids and even twin brothers to see the effects of horn size relating to the castration date but I have never seen heavy horn mass on an early castrated goat. I'd love to see a picture!feederseaters said:Hmmm, good observation Rex. I do think that there are exceptions to that logic though. I have an alpine wether that I castrated (in my opinion too young) at 3 days old. His horn base and mass is at least 2x the size of my other goats. Deffinately an exception to the rule. You are right that most times the horn size is a good indication of how old the goat was when castrated, but my boy would deceive even the text books.Rex said:Definately some sort of meat breed in there. I can also tell you he was castrated late by looking at the mass of the horns.