Tethering goats? - Homesteading Today
You are Unregistered, please register to use all of the features of Homesteading Today!    
Homesteading Today

Go Back   Homesteading Today > Livestock Forums > Goats


Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Rate Thread
  #1  
Old 06/11/08, 03:32 PM
dancingbear's Avatar  
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: KY
Posts: 486
Tethering goats?

I'm seriously thinking of getting some ND's, and looking at possibilities for housing them.

I'm wondering if it's ok to tether a goat with a collar, so they can be moved around different areas to graze.

What I have in mind is this: A decent sized, but not huge pen with a nice shelter in it, water trough or bucket, hay rack, etc., to keep one or two dwarf goats at night, then in the day time tether them out on different parts of the property where there's a good variety of browse, shade and sun, water bucket...

I'd be checking on them often. Most places I'd tether them I could see from the back door, too. Is this a fairly safe practice? I don't want to harm them by doing something stupid. I've read about people keeping goats on a tether, and wondered if it may be a good option.
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 06/11/08, 03:34 PM
Alice In TX/MO's Avatar
More dharma, less drama.
 
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Texas Coastal Bend/S. Missouri
Posts: 30,482
Tethered goats tangle themselves and anything within reach.
__________________
Alice
* * *
"No great thing is created suddenly." ~Epictitus
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 06/11/08, 04:19 PM
mygoat's Avatar
Caprice Acres
HST_MODERATOR.png
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: MI
Posts: 11,235
It's a big danger from predators or wandering dogs.

They tangle themselves, sometimes into deadly positions.

The browsing opportunities are limited, because you can't tether them near too much brush. (and therefore you would still have to provide quite a bit of feed)

If I were you, I would just spend a little more and fence the area. More expensive, yes, but MUCH, MUCH safer and alot less hassle. Better yet, make two pastures for rotational purposes.
__________________


Dona Barski

"Breed the best, eat the rest"

Caprice Acres

French and American Alpines. CAE, Johnes neg herd. Abscess free. LA, DHIR.
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 06/11/08, 04:35 PM
Where we all fit in!
 
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Kentucky
Posts: 743
This subject comes up every so often. As I am typing this, I have 11 goats tethered in my yard. They are tethered just far enough apart that they don't get tangled with each other, and it allows me to move them around to places that I can't fence in. It's a change for them, and they absolutely love it. I do it several times a week, and it cuts down on the amount I have to mow! (More eco-friendly.)

Having said that, I think it's entirely up to you and your situation. I check on mine frequently, make sure each one can reach water, and our LGD is right there with them. So, they are in my yard, I can see them from every window in the house, and they are being watched by a huge fur ball who is VERY attached to his babies.
__________________
If it needs a home, it ends up here!
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 06/11/08, 05:21 PM
dancingbear's Avatar  
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: KY
Posts: 486
I was thinking of maybe some "zip-line" arrangements, like people sometimes use for dogs. Sturdy posts with a strong cable, sort of like a clothes line, so they could run back and forth without a bunch of cable down where they'd wrap it around anything. I have 2 good dogs who guard the chickens, I'm sure they'd help me watch the goats. And, I'd never leave them tethered overnight, or when I wouldn't be home.

It's an option I'm considering, I haven't decided anything yet.
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 06/11/08, 05:35 PM
xoxoGOATSxoxo's Avatar
when in doubt, mumble.
 
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Saginaw Bay area, Michigan
Posts: 2,025
Some goats are good about it and dont get tangled, but some goats are idiots and get tangled in everything. I only tether when I am right there, doing yard work, so that I can get over there fast in case of some tangle emergency. It just seems safer....I guess its really up to you and where you tether them.
__________________
Abby
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Unless life also hands you sugar and water, your lemonade is going to suck.
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 06/11/08, 07:48 PM
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Middle of nowhere along the Rim, Arizona
Posts: 3,096
Goats are less likely, in my experience, to tangle themselves than dogs. I tether my pack goat(s) on the trail and they're pretty good at figuring out how to get detangled. Remember, they're smarter than a dog.

That said, there's another word for tethered goat: predator bait. They can't get away and they can break their necks trying. I never tie a goat up unless I'm right there to cut them loose and beat off anything attacking them.

-- Leva
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 06/11/08, 08:10 PM
 
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 34
I tether my goats and they do fine. Even though my mama goat and kid are close enough so he can nurse.
Reply With Quote
  #9  
Old 06/12/08, 12:21 AM
dancingbear's Avatar  
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: KY
Posts: 486
Good info, thanks. I'm still trying to work out how I can keep goats confined/and/or tethered or otherwise contained on my property. I'm thinking at this point maybe a movable pen, and add variety with tethering when I'm working outdoors where I can keep an eye on them. I wouldn't leave them tethered at night in any case, that would just be coyote bait. Daytime predators around here are not so likely to bother a goat. Chickens, yes, but I think a goat might be too big for a fox. At least an adult goat. When there are kids I'll have to set up something else to keep them safe.

But like I said, I don't even have a goat yet. Trying to work out how I can afford to make it happen.
Reply With Quote
  #10  
Old 06/12/08, 12:46 AM
RiverPines's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Wisconsin
Posts: 3,414
I am tethering and have many times, especially during flood periods when the fields are soaked and I move the goats farther upland from the river.
I never have a prob with any of them.
I dont tether them close together. I dont tether them near anything they can tangle in.

I like tethering better than fencing.

I watch my goats all the time.
I can see them from the windows too.

I control what they eat. They cant strip everything bare like they will do.
They are tethered all day when the weather is nice, not to hot or cold. They always have hay in their pens.

I think it works great for those of us that dont have acres and acres of land.
I like not having everything goat eaten, like fence rows. I love grown in fence rows.
__________________
"We spend money we don't have on things we don't need to create impressions that won't last on people we don't care about."
~T.Jackson

My site.
Reply With Quote
  #11  
Old 06/12/08, 06:50 AM
Naturaldane's Avatar
Cannon Farms
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Monroe Ga
Posts: 550
Im dong movable pens, but Im using heavy gauge electric fenec and the step in post, so you have to of couse be able to plug it in so that may or may not work for you, if you have spare money you can get a solar charger so you wont need an extention cord. It takes about 30 min to do a good size temp pen
Reply With Quote
  #12  
Old 06/12/08, 05:01 PM
 
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: western NY
Posts: 1,507
I do tether my bucks, but only when I am outside doing chores and can supervise them constantly. I think your idea of a movable pen is ideal; I know someone who does this and it works wonderfully.
Reply With Quote
  #13  
Old 06/12/08, 07:22 PM
ladycat's Avatar
Chicken Mafioso
HST_MODERATOR.png
 
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: N. TX/ S. OK
Posts: 26,179
I tether my goat. But I had to carefully plan it first.

The pasture is mostly fenced, but there are places where the fence is absent or falling down, so she can't be turned loose in there.

The trees and shrubs are around 2 sides of the pasture, but not in the middle. That gives ample clear, open space.

I got a heavy concrete block that must weigh at least 50#. It's HEAVY. And I wired together several lengths of old chain. I guess I ended up with about 100' of chain.

I drug the concrete block out in the middle of the pasture and attached one end of the chain to it. It took a couple of days to adjust the position of the concrete block until I had it in the right place.

Each day that I'm home (I'm seldom gone), I take the goat out to the pasture and attach her to the open end of the chain. I leave her there until late afternoon.

I have the block positioned so that the goat can reach shade and water, and she has a very wide area to roam. And she does.

One of the dogs has taken it upon herself to guard the goat when she's in the pasture, but not much worry anyhow. No daytime predators around here.

At night and when I'm not home, she's secured in a strong pen.

It works for me.
__________________
JESUS WAS NOT POLITICALLY CORRECT
Reply With Quote
  #14  
Old 06/13/08, 12:53 AM
dancingbear's Avatar  
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: KY
Posts: 486
Thanks, you guys. Very good suggestions. This gives me a lot of ideas to look at.
Reply With Quote
  #15  
Old 06/13/08, 07:06 PM
 
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Missouri
Posts: 135
Some goats will tangle themselves (and others including me if given the chance) more than others. However, every goat I've tethered IIRC found a way to get tangled. I've even had a big billy tangle himself on a clump of tall grass (he could have gotten himself loose by pulling hard but he felt some resistance and didn't bother). I prefer keeping my goats in a pasture, but some of them are determined escape artists and sometimes it takes a while to have time to improve fencing.

I have one goat now that needs tethering during the day so she can't get out. The only pasture I have that will contain her is inhabited by a possible CL case, so I can't keep her in there anymore. She has escaped her pasture two days in a row and today even brought a friend along with her who normally isn't an escapee.

Usually they are ok when tethered, they just need to be untangled occasionally. At one point I had 3 escape artists tethered around my pond 24 hours a day (I have a good guard dog). However, one day one of those goats got her feet tangled together next to the pond and fell in. It doesn't take that long for a goat to kill itself on a tether.

I would advise if you tether your goats to keep an eye on them even if there is nothing to get themselves tangled on, because some goats really are stupid enough to get their own legs, their horns, even their necks tangled on their own leashes.
Reply With Quote
  #16  
Old 06/14/08, 12:17 AM
dancingbear's Avatar  
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: KY
Posts: 486
Thanks, good info. After another conversation with my DH, we may wait awhile longer before trying to keep a goat. We have fencing issues to deal with first.

But eventually I know I'll want to get a pair of goats. It's nice to have gotten so much helpful info, so I have a better idea about what I need to have in place before I get them.
Reply With Quote
  #17  
Old 06/14/08, 12:24 AM
RiverPines's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Wisconsin
Posts: 3,414
Quote:
Originally Posted by dancingbear View Post
Thanks, good info. After another conversation with my DH, we may wait awhile longer before trying to keep a goat. We have fencing issues to deal with first.

But eventually I know I'll want to get a pair of goats. It's nice to have gotten so much helpful info, so I have a better idea about what I need to have in place before I get them.
Glad you said a pair.
In your first post you said one or two. One isnt good as they need company. Herd animals can not be alone. It would be an awfully stressful existence.
__________________
"We spend money we don't have on things we don't need to create impressions that won't last on people we don't care about."
~T.Jackson

My site.
Reply With Quote
  #18  
Old 06/14/08, 05:14 PM
dancingbear's Avatar  
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: KY
Posts: 486
Yeah, I know that about herd animals, and I know they're not happy alone. I wouldn't want to do that. I was thinking if I had to start with one, I'd get a 2nd one as soon as possible.
Reply With Quote
  #19  
Old 06/14/08, 09:22 PM
buspete's Avatar  
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: New Hampshire
Posts: 456
I used to cut the grass with a pair of nubians. They were twin sisters and had collars, so I ran a length of chain around a big wooden wire spool and attached each doe to an end. This was just during the day. The spool was more than they could drag around (they seldom work together) and I could more it around to cut different parts of the yard.

Never had a problem.

Of course, Bumper would get tangled in everything else (including the old head-in-a-bucket schtick), and her son Junior had a habit of getting his head stuck in the fence, but somehow they never got tangled when tethered
Reply With Quote
  #20  
Old 06/14/08, 11:44 PM
chewie's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: central south dakota
Posts: 4,096
i have tried tethering my milkers, and the old nub girl will eat like crazy, but my saanan stands there and cries if i leave! she does no eating hardly, and is very stressed. so i dont' bother with it, i just take an old bread knife, cut them a bucket of grass and put in their pen. no worries of dogs, dumped water, tangled leashes. i cut the grass where ever it needs it--garden along the walks, etc., so i'm getting 2 things done with one action. i only have 4 and 2 babies, so real easy to cut enough for them, along with their hay. more like a nice snack than their full diet.
Reply With Quote
Reply




Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:55 PM.
Contact Us - Homesteading Today - Archive - Privacy Statement - Top - ©Carbon Media Group Agriculture