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  #21  
Old 01/14/14, 11:24 AM
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Generally the dam raised kids are wild until a year old then they warm up to us. sounds like a long time but it really isn't. last years kids are letting me pet them now. However we did have a few that didn't warm up so they were culled.

I can't bottle raise because my tendency to get attached. Its okay if i bottle feed girls, but the boys i just cant handle. I get rid of all boys and thats hard especially if they are so friendly. Its easier if they are wild to sell/eat.

the one thing that I hate most about dam raising and wild kids is the chores every single night. I have to catch them and separate them. CATCH them. I might be chasing them for an hour or two. Finally got smart last year and built a little chute deal, would chase them into that and get them. The thing i do like is if i have to go somewhere in the morning i can leave the kids on and not have to milk.
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  #22  
Old 01/14/14, 02:38 PM
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I dam raise but handle the kids daily at least twice. They always end up as the sweetest little things. I don't expect to ever bottle raise as I see it as sort of a waste.
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  #23  
Old 01/14/14, 05:59 PM
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I don't see how people think bottle feeding is way more work. Takes us a few minutes every feeding, about 3x per day. We bucket feed 3x per day. Way less time than it takes to tame dam raised kids. It makes the whole management system way easier, IMO.
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  #24  
Old 01/14/14, 06:09 PM
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It takes 10 minutes a day to have friendly dam raised kids. I bottle raised kids two years, and after having 20 kids to bottle feed that last time, I said never again. If that's what YOU want to do that's great. NONE of my dam raised kids were EVER wild.
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  #25  
Old 01/14/14, 06:09 PM
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Well, it might not take up as much time, but just the fact that it has to be a daily schedule turns me off. When you are just petting them and hugging them twice a day for 8 minutes, you don't have a certain time to do it. Whether it's at 12:00 a.m or 4:30 a.m! I'm too busy to go out and feed kids at certain times. And getting the bottles ready takes up a lot of time, too. I would think getting bottles ready for 10+ kids takes at least 8 minutes, and then the extra 7 minutes of feeding. 15 minutes is not so bad, so the time difference isn't what gets me, it's just that you have to be ON time.

Oh, and the loudness! Kids aren't loud (at least with my experience) if they are with their momma because there's a walking milk machine free for them to drink out of at any time. But whenever we had bottle-raised anything, the noise was just endless.

This is only my opinion. I will say that I usually enjoy bottle raised personalities more (unless they turn out rude or TOO pushy), but otherwise I just like the momma+baby thing. I also think it is better for ANY animal to be with it's mom when young, because it's just natural and the way it always has been.
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  #26  
Old 01/14/14, 06:17 PM
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It takes a lot if interaction for the first 48 hours. This is the imprinting period. After that, if only takes a few minutes each day to maintain. It's not hard to give them a few minutes interaction every morning when you let them out and that's all it takes. When they get old enough for grain, then they are all over you.
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  #27  
Old 01/14/14, 07:16 PM
 
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Well, I am old and I think that it takes real sacrifice to hand raise kids! So there!! lol
Actually, those first two days when they are being fed every couple of hours and there are usually at least 5 of them around here...if not more...it seems like you just go to bed and you are up again! After that it moves pretty quickly to 4 times a day...but again, with 10 or 12 to bottle, it seems like one feeding runs into another. We use the gray bucket nipples right off the bat and try to get them on the bucket by 3 weeks...THEN it gets much easier!! As I said "WE ARE OLD" and that makes a difference...trust me, it does!
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  #28  
Old 01/15/14, 12:58 AM
 
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I bottle raise from the get go usually and i do not get up every 2 hours to feed them and they still do great. I just feed them as often as they want while im awake the first day and make sure to do one right before bed and right when i get up--if born late in the day i will wake up ONCE in the night to feed. By the second or third day, i generally feed 4x a day down to 3x at a week old then to 2x at a month.
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  #29  
Old 01/15/14, 01:16 AM
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Neither - I use a lambar

Really, you just have to try both and see what you like. I dam raised in the beginning, because I wanted to do things naturally. After the first 2 years, I didn't have the patients for it any more and switched to bottle feeding because it was just way easier and worked better for me.
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  #30  
Old 01/15/14, 06:28 AM
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Right now we dam raise (but have the ability to bottle should we NEED to)
We just have too much going on personally to be tied down to it. Now
that being said, we're out there as often as if we were bottle feeding, lol
just don't HAVE to be should something come up and we're unavailable.

We handle daily and yes, they're often shy - but it doesn't take long for
them to come around.
We start pulling at 2-3 weeks for over night(we'll probably go 3 wks this time with mama's trips) and milk in the morning, she gets them the rest of the time. It's plenty enough milk for them and us

That's what's working for us - for now!
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  #31  
Old 01/15/14, 07:57 AM
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I've dam raised so far and haven't had any yet that are remotely unfriendly. I just don't see how it is even possible...seems like they come out of the womb wanting to be attached to us. Of course, I have a very small herd and started with friendly goats, so that might make a difference.

I bottle fed three bucklings last year for a week (because I was selling them) and vowed to never do that again. I absolutely despised it!

I'm not sure what I'm going to do this year. I plan to sell all of the doelings, so I suppose I'll have to bottle feed them so I can sell them young. The bucklings, however, are going to be raised for meat. I'd like to keep them on their dams, but I'm afraid the boys will be rough on the udders. Anyone have experience with that?
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  #32  
Old 01/15/14, 08:07 AM
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I have never had any trouble with bucklings and udder issues. The only udder issue related to nursing was once when I grafted a lamb onto a doe. Never again!

If you think you might be able to sell doelings as bottle babies but don't like bottle feeding, a middle road that works for me is to start separating the babies at 1 week old. Then I bottle feed them in the morning before turning out with mom. They learn to eat from a bottle (usually fairly easy, but not always) that way but aren't dependent on it and it's not too much of a hassle. After they have the hang of it, usually a couple days, if you skip once in a while, it's fine. I've even gone to twice a week bottle feedings after they get the hang of it. They don't seem to forget once they have it in their heads and goatlings are ALWAYS up for a meal!
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  #33  
Old 01/15/14, 08:09 AM
 
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Usually ours are born in the middle of the night. Our girls believe that is the only time to deliver kids! Due to the fact that we want to get the colostrum in the kids within the first 12 hours and also due to the fact that our kids do not take big amounts right off the bat, we feed frequently during the first night and the next day. The kids are inside the house in a crib in our bedroom for the first 24-36 hours. Then they move downstairs to the big dog cages for a few days (weeks!) depending on the weather. There is feeding, cleaning up the bedding and usually more birthing to attend. It is a very busy time without much sleep here. I used the word "sacrifice" and I want to explain that. ALL good breeders give lots of time and care to the animals they are raising...particularly the little babies and that is a "sacrifice" of time and energy to make sure that their stock is healthy and happy. Well worth it!! At our age we are slowing down and not able to move as quickly as we used to do...so, we are considering our options while still maintaining good care. I believe that leaving the kids on their dam will definitely cut down on the time and work involved and while others see that differently...I hope you are wrong!!! lol
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  #34  
Old 01/15/14, 08:22 AM
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I think it's more how you dam raise or bottle raise. If you spend a lot of time with your animals, they'll be nice and friendly no matter how you raise them. If you tend to only go out to feed and milk, bottle raising almost becomes a necessity to have friendly animals. I don't think either way is bad. Goats are infinitely adaptable! And easily tweakable, management wise. I tried several different approaches before I found what works for me in my current circumstances. If I had to work outside the home and wanted friendly babies, I'd probably bottle raise. Dam raising may take more time, but is less work. It's very hard to sell goats here period, so I don't usually even bother with the boys or doelings from less desirable breedings. They stay on their mom and I never have anything to do with them, attention wise, til it's time to butcher.
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  #35  
Old 01/15/14, 09:19 AM
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We have always bottle fed for the most part
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  #36  
Old 01/15/14, 11:45 AM
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I bottle raise my kids though some years I have dam raised. If I am keeping a kid back I bottle raise them, I will never keep a dam raised animal again if I can help it.

I bottle raise not to have them friendly because I agree you can have friendly dam raised babies. I bottle raise because I want them to TRUST me. I have yet to meet a friendly dam raised doe or buck that fully trusts you which makes it very difficult to work with them. Bottle raised do tend to be on the friendlier range but like I said I have met some dam raised that where friendly.

I just on the whole prefer a bottle kid to a dam kid. They are so much easier to work with and if they ever get scared or stressed they run to you instead of away from you. But it is different strokes for different folkes . You have to find what works best for you and your herd.

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  #37  
Old 01/15/14, 12:03 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GoldenWood Farm View Post
I bottle raise my kids though some years I have dam raised. If I am keeping a kid back I bottle raise them, I will never keep a dam raised animal again if I can help it.

I bottle raise not to have them friendly because I agree you can have friendly dam raised babies. I bottle raise because I want them to TRUST me. I have yet to meet a friendly dam raised doe or buck that fully trusts you which makes it very difficult to work with them. Bottle raised do tend to be on the friendlier range but like I said I have met some dam raised that where friendly.

I just on the whole prefer a bottle kid to a dam kid. They are so much easier to work with and if they ever get scared or stressed they run to you instead of away from you. But it is different strokes for different folkes . You have to find what works best for you and your herd.

Justine

This also all depends on the animal and the person they are interacting with. I haven't had an issue with trust with my dam raised animals. The key being MY dam raised animals. I spend lots of time with them and, since I walk to the mail most days, take the babies individually with me often. They learn that I will protect them from the neighbors dogs. I actually haven't had experience with other people's dam raised animals so can't speak there. I have had repeat buyers for my dam raised babies.

On the other hand, I have had 2 bottle babies that were wild as march hares. Both came from largish scale breeders that used a lambar. Both animals would come to you for food, but not for anything else. I personally think both animals are partially that way anyway and would still be skittish if raised with lots of attention. Just the way they were and they were definitely not the norm for bottle babies. Or any human habituated goat.

That's why I like it when people give more details about how, when, where, why, etc. It helps others (me) decide how to do or adapt things to individual circumstances. Everyone's will be different. The way I do things won't work for everybody, but someone may look at what I do and find one facet of it that does work for them. That's how I work, a hodgepodge of other people's methods as well as trial and error.

Aren't goats fun?!
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  #38  
Old 01/15/14, 12:07 PM
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I agree and I think the personality of the animal comes into play. I have had some kids that where born naturally friendly and you would never know where bottle raised. I have had a few bottle raised kids that where wilder than march hares for the most part.

It is all about what works for each person and their herd . But I know for me personality comes into play just as much as bottle raising. Can't go against how they where wired to begin with sometimes .

Justine
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  #39  
Old 01/15/14, 01:19 PM
 
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We also let the dams raise their babies, NEVER had problems with wild kids. Our goats come in the barn every night and we can play with the babies...it does help that the moms are super friendly......Nubians. We are going to be milking more this year so are going to separate nights at 2 weeks old and just milk in the morning. Also, this allows each doe to get her share of the grain at least once a day on the milk stand. Can also have a good "look see" each day, hoofs etc.
Each person's situation is different. I am retired now and have more time for making, yogurt, soap, cheese etc. Starting to milk sheep too so this schedule makes a nice fit with the sheep.
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  #40  
Old 01/15/14, 07:21 PM
 
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The thing that bothers me most about dam-raising dairy goats is the dams not weaning their dang kids!! I have separated for months and they still went back to nursing! I had one doe I ended up selling. I separated her from her dam for a couple months, and she went back to nursing...I think she was about 8 months old; then separated her again until the dam was dry. She wasn't nursing at that time. I left her in the barn with her dam when the dam was in labor to keep her company, BAD idea!! The doeling (by that time nearly 1 year old), nursed out most of her dam's colostrum, and the dam had quads!!!! Luckily I noticed a couple hours before the birth, and re-separated them and she's a heavy milker, so she did have some colostrum for babies, but EEK! That yearling had her first kids around 14-15 months old, and I tried seeing if I left her kids on her, if she would stop nursing her dam...NOPE! Her kids would nurse her while she nursed her mom, it was terrible! LOL. I don't think most are quite that bad, but I have dam-raised others and they didn't seem to want to wean either. On the other hand, my most recent kids were on their dam for about a week because I was leaving town shortly after they were born, and the buckling was refusing the bottle for the most part. Three days later, I tried to give him back to her, and she would have nothing to do with him, so it was bottle or starve. I had to teach him by restraining her in a stand and covering her teats while giving him the bottle...
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