My little herd is at 14 - 3 of the girls are pregnant, and as the others go into heat (and are insane while in heat!!!) I'm thinking EAAAGGHH I have too many goats!!
I have 10 acres, and it's cross-fenced in a zillion places so they always have somewhere new to browse. In heat, they disregard fences, break into feed, break into the buck pen (hence one of the girls being pregnant - I hadn't planned to breed her) and generally wreak havoc.
When we started, with 2 goats, they were pretty wild, and while taming them we turned them into essentially pets. We bought one more, the darling, who was sweet as pie. Then we bought 2 more - one who had a baby already. At 5 goats and a baby, we were getting a bit more milk, and it was pretty manageable. Then one had twins, and so on - over the years we've slowly and reluctantly ended up where we are at 14 goats. A few of these girls I'll never breed again due to udder issues and health issues. (These are the ones who are super delicate, etc) A few wethers plus the never-breed-again dry does means we're supporting 7 goats with no purpose whatsoever. On the other hand, we also have 3 ostensible livestock guardian dogs who serve little purpose, and a wide variety of barn cats who chase the catfood bowl more than anything else, so I can't really blame the goats, I guess. We're enablers of a non-useful lifestyle! LOL!
My issue is this - we've considered these goats to essentially be pets. Some were born here, others we've had their whole lives, or for a considerable amount of time. We've nursed them through illness, coaxed them into liking us, and given them treats and hugs. My logical brain says, 'Sell them. Cut losses and have more resources to give to the goats that don't cause problems, don't use resources, etc.'
My emotional brain says, "NOOOO they're part of the family, and you don't just sell family members when they stop being useful to you!"
One of my kids embraces the idea of selling the most troublemaking fencebreaking non-milk-making goats. The littler kid is in tears at the thought of selling any of them at all. I feel guilty even thinking about it!!! But I think at some point it'll need to happen.
I can't be the only person to have dealt with this issue over the years.... Advice welcome!
I have 10 acres, and it's cross-fenced in a zillion places so they always have somewhere new to browse. In heat, they disregard fences, break into feed, break into the buck pen (hence one of the girls being pregnant - I hadn't planned to breed her) and generally wreak havoc.
When we started, with 2 goats, they were pretty wild, and while taming them we turned them into essentially pets. We bought one more, the darling, who was sweet as pie. Then we bought 2 more - one who had a baby already. At 5 goats and a baby, we were getting a bit more milk, and it was pretty manageable. Then one had twins, and so on - over the years we've slowly and reluctantly ended up where we are at 14 goats. A few of these girls I'll never breed again due to udder issues and health issues. (These are the ones who are super delicate, etc) A few wethers plus the never-breed-again dry does means we're supporting 7 goats with no purpose whatsoever. On the other hand, we also have 3 ostensible livestock guardian dogs who serve little purpose, and a wide variety of barn cats who chase the catfood bowl more than anything else, so I can't really blame the goats, I guess. We're enablers of a non-useful lifestyle! LOL!
My issue is this - we've considered these goats to essentially be pets. Some were born here, others we've had their whole lives, or for a considerable amount of time. We've nursed them through illness, coaxed them into liking us, and given them treats and hugs. My logical brain says, 'Sell them. Cut losses and have more resources to give to the goats that don't cause problems, don't use resources, etc.'
My emotional brain says, "NOOOO they're part of the family, and you don't just sell family members when they stop being useful to you!"
One of my kids embraces the idea of selling the most troublemaking fencebreaking non-milk-making goats. The littler kid is in tears at the thought of selling any of them at all. I feel guilty even thinking about it!!! But I think at some point it'll need to happen.
I can't be the only person to have dealt with this issue over the years.... Advice welcome!