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05/26/14, 06:45 PM
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More dharma, less drama.
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Join Date: May 2002
Location: Texas Coastal Bend/S. Missouri
Posts: 30,482
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how much solid feed for bottle kids as they grow?
Now that we have a pen of goat kids from age 5 weeks to 3 months, I have NO CLUE how much feed to put out.
They have hay and browse.
How much feed should be offered?
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Alice
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"No great thing is created suddenly." ~Epictitus
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05/26/14, 07:02 PM
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Louisa, VA
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Join Date: Nov 2012
Location: VA
Posts: 958
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We just throw a coffee can full of goat pellet mixed with alfalfa pellet and BOSS in a rubber pan for the 6 kids each night when they get locked up. They're all growing beautifully.
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05/26/14, 07:05 PM
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More dharma, less drama.
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Join Date: May 2002
Location: Texas Coastal Bend/S. Missouri
Posts: 30,482
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Coffee cans come in different sizes.  The size formerly known as a pound?
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Alice
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"No great thing is created suddenly." ~Epictitus
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05/26/14, 07:36 PM
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Louisa, VA
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Join Date: Nov 2012
Location: VA
Posts: 958
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Alice In TX/MO
Coffee cans come in different sizes.  The size formerly known as a pound?
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One of the old metal cans, sorry. Not sure how many ounces, but it's the old-style that was sold before plastic became popular
One of my doelings gained 11 lbs in 3 weeks, and the least amount gained by any of them was 9.5 lbs in 3 weeks, so I know they're eating well. We also give them a bag of hay (I hang it on the outside of their chainlink pen so they have to pull the hay through to eat it - no danger of getting tangled up, and they don't spin the bag repeatedly that way).
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05/26/14, 07:39 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Maryland
Posts: 3,588
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I usually free feed grain until they're of the age where they get greedy and gobble down more than they should. I'd say maximum 1 lb/head/day.
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05/26/14, 08:43 PM
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Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Mountain Home, Arkansas
Posts: 2,550
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I'm feeding as much as they can eat. I never let the feeders get empty.
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05/26/14, 09:30 PM
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Louisa, VA
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Join Date: Nov 2012
Location: VA
Posts: 958
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Doug Hodges
I'm feeding as much as they can eat. I never let the feeders get empty.
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How do you keep the adults out of it, or are you bottle feeding? I haven't figured out a way to set up a creep feeding system, so my kids only get grain at night when they get locked up.
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05/26/14, 09:45 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Central Texas
Posts: 2,739
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We usually do one cup of grain per kid, two times a day. Free feed hay and browse. Our "grain" is a 50/50 oats and barley mixture with some BOSS, beet pulp and molasses thrown in.
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05/26/14, 11:40 PM
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Legally blonde!
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Join Date: May 2003
Location: Oregon
Posts: 3,315
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My kids started out from about 3 weeks on with free choice grain/hay/alfalfa. Now they get free choice grain, hay and Chaffhaye along with their morning bottle, they also have full time access to pasture. Mine are now 2 months to almost 4 months old  .
My kids grew great and in fact by 6 weeks of age my bucks where over 40lbs closing in on 50lbs  .
Justine
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05/27/14, 06:15 AM
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Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Mountain Home, Arkansas
Posts: 2,550
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how much solid feed for bottle kids as they grow?
Quote:
Originally Posted by harvestmoonfarm
How do you keep the adults out of it, or are you bottle feeding? I haven't figured out a way to set up a creep feeding system, so my kids only get grain at night when they get locked up.
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I'm keeping them in a different pasture during the day and locking them up at night and yes. I'm lambar (bottle) feeding.
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05/27/14, 08:40 AM
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le person
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Join Date: May 2003
Location: Arkansas
Posts: 6,236
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I also start mine out at free choice. If you're not already doing free choice, it will be kind of hard, since you have some kids that are older in there. But I feed free choice until they get up to eating 1 lb a day per kid and I then continue to feed them 1/2 lb twice a day from there.
I would just do a very slow increase until they are leaving some.
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05/27/14, 08:59 AM
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Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Missouri
Posts: 1,300
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I challenge feed. If they have ate up all that I have put out in the morning I put more out at night. If not I don't. If they eat it all one day I give a little more the next. They have alfalfa and orchard grass hay out free choice also.
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05/27/14, 09:00 AM
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Caprice Acres
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Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: MI
Posts: 11,232
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I creep feed as well. The trick is getting it out there before they eat solid food so they wean themselves onto it. Much easier that way, than trying to slowly introduce it to prevent bellyaches.
I do 2 parts medicated/balanced lamb pellet, 1 part alfalfa pellet. Free choice hay/minerals/water/baking soda too.
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Dona Barski
"Breed the best, eat the rest"
Caprice Acres
French and American Alpines. CAE, Johnes neg herd. Abscess free. LA, DHIR.
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05/27/14, 09:12 AM
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Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Southwest Ohio
Posts: 1,306
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very helpful discussion.
just to confirm what I'm reading, because we are new to this as well -- consensus is free choice hay, alfalfa and either
1) free choice grain until they are eating a pound per day each
or 2) feed half a pound every morning and another half a pound every evening 'forever' (or until they are pregnant/lactating).
Did I catch this properly?
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05/27/14, 01:23 PM
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Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Mountain Home, Arkansas
Posts: 2,550
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Yep...
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05/27/14, 02:46 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 2,080
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We have a buyer who tells us that the buckling they purchased from us is not taking any milk (this is on a different thread). The buckling is 8 weeks old. What would you all advise I tell her to give this little one since he is refusing to drink milk? We feed milk forever and no grain until maybe 6 months of age...we have never had a kid refuse milk and so this thread is very helpful at this time...what/how much for the very young kid that REFUSES milk?? Thanks!!
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05/27/14, 02:49 PM
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Caprice Acres
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Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: MI
Posts: 11,232
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Free choice hjgh quality hay and browse, minerals, baking soda to start.
Start offering grain in a small quantity - a cup or so. Increase slowly. I strongly suggest a lamb pellet for bucklings, because not only is it balanced 2:1 calcium, it also contains ammonium chloride as well.
__________________
Dona Barski
"Breed the best, eat the rest"
Caprice Acres
French and American Alpines. CAE, Johnes neg herd. Abscess free. LA, DHIR.
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05/27/14, 02:50 PM
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Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Missouri
Posts: 1,300
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Are they getting it too warm, too cold? Some of mine that were born in the middle of March are backing off quite a bit right now. Seems like when the weather warms up they don't like to take milk as well. IME anyway. One reason I like early kids !!
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05/27/14, 02:51 PM
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Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Mountain Home, Arkansas
Posts: 2,550
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dozedotz
We have a buyer who tells us that the buckling they purchased from us is not taking any milk (this is on a different thread). The buckling is 8 weeks old. What would you all advise I tell her to give this little one since he is refusing to drink milk? We feed milk forever and no grain until maybe 6 months of age...we have never had a kid refuse milk and so this thread is very helpful at this time...what/how much for the very young kid that REFUSES milk?? Thanks!!
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Wanted you to know that the girls are liking the free choice noble goat. They are quitting the lambar before it's empty and Fawn (adga named her Lawn today but that's another story) isn't really that interested in the milk. I have to help her by putting her on the nipple. They are filling up on the pellets and browse and not wanting as much milk. Since I started giving the pellets free choice, the others have really started growing. I just started this when I got back from Fredonia at the urging of Ruth Green. Her babies were bigger than mine. So I decided to give as much pellets and milk as they can hold.
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05/27/14, 02:54 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 2,080
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Very helpful, as always! Thanks! We are soooooo devoted to giving milk and have never had a kid refuse milk that frankly, I just didn't think: What happens if the kid will not take the milk~!?? Much appreciated...I just hope nothing else is wrong...This is the biggest kid..over 40 pounds, loves and I mean loves his milk!! Very, very surprised that he is the one that is refusing milk!! She says he is passing pellets and peeing, eating grass pasture and playing (her words: "very active") So, I am inclined to think it just is what it is...BUT I worry!!!
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