learning moments with goats.

June 26, 2011

By raising goats, our children have had the opportunity to learn about so many aspects of life first hand. We have never had to have those awkward conversations about ‘where babies come from’ because they know exactly where the seed is, where it goes and what happens to make a baby goat! The process of reproduction is a natural part of their lives.

They have watched and helped the does giving birth…

and have witnessed how the mothers care for their new born kids…

they have watched as new borns take their first breath…

and cared for and enjoyed them as they grow…

they have experienced having weak kids, and learning how to help them get a good start in life…

and they have learned to deal with death when one or two are lost. They also know that to eat meat comes with a sacrifice. They have learned good stewardship, and care for all the goats equally no matter whether they are for milk or for meat.

By keeping goats, our children have learned and are learning naturally more than I could ever have imaged, and for that I am very grateful.

Categories: goats, natural learning, Uncategorized.

Raising Goats.

June 25, 2011

3 years ago we decided to get our first dairy goat. This is Melody when she first became a part of our family. She is a Toggenberg x Nubian. She is living at the dairy now, but she was the start of our herd. At her peak Melody can give up to 4 litres of milk a day. She is a lovely goat, although temperamental, and I have *fond* memories of trying to insist that she serves me, not the other way round :) While she was with us Melody produced 3 bucks and one doe. Earlier in the year we sold her to our friends who sell raw goats milk, and she is very happy in her new home.

Here I am milking Melody a couple of years ago.
Melody with her kids last year. This is her daughter, Devorah. She is almost fully grown now and is currently spending a few weeks with a lovely buck, so she will be due to kid late October. I am very much looking forward to seeing how much milk she produces, given her excellent genes!

This is Frannie. We took Frannie as a doeling shortly after getting Melody. She is a bit of a mixture of Boer and Saneen. Frannie was such a naughty teenager…jumping fences, getting stuck in places where she shouldn’t have been…typical naughty goat kind of stuff! But once she got an udder she settled down to being a mother and was a very well behaved milker, for the most part :) Frannie is with another family now, but while with us she produced 4 bucks and 2 does and provided us with around 2 litres of milk a day at her peak.

Frannie’s first kidding, 2 bucks. 2nd kidding, 2 does and 1 buck

Harmony was a boer goat that we bought as a companion for Melody. Boer goats are better for meat than milk, and so we had no intention at the time of breeding her. However, little did we know that she was in kid when we bought her, and a few months later gave birth to triplets!

2 bucks and a doe.So needless to say, we got into the meat side of raising goats also. For the first few we used the abattoir, but after awhile Jono felt that it was more humane and far more practical to learn how to do the butchering himself. So now he prepares all our meat for us. The following year Harmony gave birth to 5 kids! 5! We had to bottle feed 2 of the really little ones, but they all did very well. Unfortunately Harmony didn’t cope with the extreme change in weather earlier in the year. The rains brought on a widespread occurence of intensinal worms in livestock in the area, and she didn’t make it through. But she was a lovely goat, and she produced 5 boys which were meat for our table :)

(the big brown kid belongs to another goat, which I’ll tell you about shortly!)

William feeding ‘Pip’ and ‘Rebekah’

This is Gerty. Gerty is a pure boer, Harmony’s daughter from her first kidding with us. She gave birth to 2 bucks last year, one of which was our ‘passover lamb’ this year! She is also at the dairy now with Melody, and even though she only produces about 1/2 a litre a day, truly believes herself to be a dairy goat now :)

This is Heidi. We bought Heidi in kid from an organic farm. She gave us a doe and a buck on her first kidding, and two does on her second. Heidi was never milked when we bought her and it took some time and energy (and frustration!) but we broke her in and she produced up to 2 litres a day at her peak. We sold her along with Frannie earlier in the year. We still have her daughters Tikva, who kidded a doeling 5 weeks ago, and Sufa, who is with Devorah and the buck and due to kid in late October.

Clara, Heidi’s daughter from her first kidding. A lovely, lovely goat! She is part Boer so she didn’t give a lot of milk but she was always a joy to milk. She had two bucks last year that were sold as weed eaters and we sold Clara along with one of Frannie’s does just before we moved. and the man responsible for all these goat children????

Jack the Buck.

Bridget hand raised Jack and he was the most gentle, happy, affectionate buck you could ever want. Here he is as a baby…We sold Jack after he went over his daughters, as the first generation is ok, but not the second in terms of genetic problems. He is now a stud buck at a lovely farm not too far from here :)

So we are up to our 3rd generation of goats. Frannie’s girl Az and Heidi’s girl Tikva have kids and are milking well, and we have 2 bucks for the freezer. I can’t say that raising goats has been easy, but it has certainly been rewarding, and satisfying to know that us and our children are eating and drinking our own organic, chemical free produce :)

Categories: goats.

The new goat milk dairy.

April 8, 2010
No, it’s not ours! But it was very exciting to be a part of the opening of Young’s first ever goat milk dairy! Sue and Colin have been milking goats and making goats milk soap for years now, and have now ventured into supplying the community with 100% fresh raw goats milk sold through the local supermarket. Sue has been a great help to me over the last couple of years regarding our own goats; in fact her bucks produced our kids last year and we bought own own buck Jack from her for this years kidding!

 The Mayor did the official opening…

 all the ‘girls’ down in the paddock
 tasting time!
It’s great to know that there is a healthy alternate to mass produced cows milk now for the towns folk!

Categories: country living, goats.

A poem by Bridget.

February 7, 2010
Late Summer  

The white puffy clouds, the tall green trees, the wind rustles through their leaves.
The rain that falls on the dry, dry ground that brings life all around.
The big tall goat reaches high to the sky, and eats all the leaves from the trees so high.
The little goat jumps from fence to fence ,and eats all the green that the rain brings. 
We will laugh when we fix the fence, because he can’t jump from here to there! 
So he will stay under the nice green trees, and eat all the shrubs, grass and things. 
He is happy and so are we. 
I like late summer, it’s so lovely!!
by Bridget Vandor

Categories: family, goats.

Easy goat’s milk cheese

January 13, 2010
This is a yummy soft cheese that I make from time to time. I bring about 2 litres or so of raw goat’s milk almost to the boil. Turn off the heat, and stir in a tablespoon of white vinegar to separate the curds from the whey. I have been hearing about the health benefits of apple cider vinegar lately, so I might try that next time. Actually, lemon juice would work just as well too.

Then I strain it through a muslin cloth in a colander in the sink. Sometimes I keep some of the whey for the pets. Apparently it is very good for them, although they don’t go berserk over it! Once the curds have cooled I squeeze out as much moisture as I can. This is the amount of cheese that comes from 2 litres of milk…not much, hey!
Then I season it with salt, pepper and crushed garlic. This morning I added a little paprika! Other times I have added chives, but it looks like the heat killed what little crop I had going there in my pitiful herb garden. Sigh.
I press the cheese into a container, cover it with cling wrap and that’s it. It tastes great as soon as it’s made, but a couple of days in the fridge really gives it a nice edge. We eat it on toast or crackers, and it is lovely sprinkled on a salad.

Categories: cooking, country living, goats.

Frannies kids

November 13, 2009
She had them sometime this morning before we got up! Bridget went out to feed Jack and there they were. Very convenient!

2 boys…which is good because Frannie is part Boer and we are wanting to breed that out of our milking line. Anyway, they are very cute and Frannie is proving to be an attentive mother.

Categories: goats.

Our oats.

November 11, 2009
Here is our paddock of oats ready for harvest in about a month!
This is where our 9 goats live, so for now they are VERY well fed! We didn’t spray this crop at all, so there are plenty of weeds and other delights for them around the edges of the crop to keep their diet varied.
If you look closely, you will see a goats head sticking out on the right! So Jillian, as you can see,  I would have to try something other than oats to keep my nanny happy during milking!! Understandably, she is not really interested in anything in a bucket at the moment!

Categories: goats.

Melody kidded today!

October 30, 2009

Just one – and a boy – but we are very happy with him. He’s a big boy…I’ll weigh him tommorrow, but probably good that there was just one! He’s got excellent markings…and will make a good buck…if we decide to keep him, or sell him. Anyone interested????

Categories: goats.

my pregnant goats.

September 18, 2009
This is frannie. She is a maiden, which means this is her first pregnancy. She is due on 14th November.
This is my melody. This is her 2nd pregnancy. She just finished up milking this week, and she is due on 31st October…less than six weeks.
and this is the setting sun bringing in the last shabbat for this month.
Blessed Sabbath to you all :)

Categories: goats, sabbath.