
05/01/10, 02:22 PM
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Join Date: May 2005
Location: Idaho
Posts: 4,124
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You never can tell how a doe will perform or act in another herd. I sold a doe that was gentle and a sweetheart in my herd to Tracy, and apparently she was a pain in the neck there! She never caused me trouble here, but moving to another herd shakes up the dominance order. I have also received does that were queens in their former herd, but did not stay the queen in mine.
My experience has been that the 2nd doe in command is usually a wanna be queen and that they often cause trouble. But if you get rid of them, the next in line will often act in a similar manner. Before you get rid of her, I would look at possible causes of the behavior such as overcrowding, insufficient feeder space, routines and herd movement paths that cause conflict, etc.
For example, at one time I had my milking area set up so that the outgoing and incoming does went through the same gate. When I put one goat in, others were cramming to come in. It caused a lot of fighting and stress, which went away when I added an outgoing gate so that there was no more 2 way traffic. Also, the milking stands were set up so that other goats could stick their heads in and try to steal grain from the does being milked. This caused a lot of fussing and kicking and stress, too. If possible, there should be a solid barrier so that the doe being milked doesn't even see other does ogling her grain. Stressed animals act badly.
For the kicking, you can evaluate factors such as rings on your fingers (they can pinch the tender teat skin), milking technique (all teats are different, so what is fine for one doe may hurt another), and if she has kids nursing, where they are while she is being milked (often a doe will relax if her kids are clipped to a lead rope near her while she's being milked, and this is a great time to teach the kids to stand nicely on a lead and eat a little grain).
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