The Accidental Smallholder Forum
Livestock => Goats => Topic started by: darkbrowneggs on December 02, 2011, 01:50:51 pm
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I have no idea of the value of goats, and don't want them for myself, but I thought they looked good to me. They are by Leominster somewhere I think.......
Link to advert (http://www.exchangeandmart.co.uk/nid1000459/index.asp?adid=1466705&lnk=312&desc=2%20x%20Saanen%20nanny%20kids%209%20months%20old&orderby=hasphoto,start_date%20desc&page=1&category_id=132)
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If they have a decent pedigree (milk in their ancestry) they would be at least 150 per kid... If unregistered ask the breeder to register them for you (only original breeder can register them properly in the Herd book). If they come from unregistered stock you have no idea what you are byuing. At 50 quid they are VERY cheap...
Goats are quite expensive to feed, so it pays to choose carefully.
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:wave:the advert states they are registered. the horns would put alot of people off.
at £50 the pr they would be cheap meat for the freezer.
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Though you may have to search for a vet who would do it, they can still be de-horned. I would leap at them if I were nearer.
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You would struggle to find a vet who would be prepared to take horns off at that age. It is messy and dangerous. Lots of blood...
A lot of people keep their goats with horns, but you would have to watch your fencing and if you have children aropund it could be quite dangerous. I would always opt for disbudding my own kids and only buy disbudded adults.
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Shame about the horns, personaly I wouldn't have a horned goat, however friendly they are, they only have to lift their head or turn round quickly and there could be injury. In saying that, I suppose certain areas they may need a defence.
II'm also not sure about the wording 'will eat all your docks and thistles' (or something like that) people may think they will live on rubbish, they could have worded it better.
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I would have been very interested if they had been disbudded. Mine can cause quite a lot of bleeding with residual horns when they play fight. I dread to think what full size ones would do. :(
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lovely looking but its cheap isn:t it?
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very cheap :-\ I would worry personally.
I have a horned girl here, no problems when they bicker but I have made sure my children are very aware of her horns as although I don't think she'd ever be deliberately nasty with them its when the girls have their faces near her and she jerks back or something. I have had one of her horns in my ribcage once (accidentally) and it hurts!!
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and 'used to being tethered' ::)
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You can actually see the tether if you look carefully - its a small chain. shame
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They look so much like my savannah don't they? must be the horns. and yes, I'm tempted just to get them off the tethers but we don't have room esp. with puffin coming and with mum being ill I can't take more on :(
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yep they do look like savannah
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our goats have horns and havnt bin a problem. the billies are huge but as hes quite shy hed rather run than butt u.
hop they get a home soon.
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Just emailed seller with a few questions - thanks for posting the ad - i hate to see unwanted goats needing homes - hopefully she's only put £50 because she wants to home them quickly but isn't giving them away FOC for meat - & hopefully she's only tethered them out of ignorance and not cruelty - atleast she wants them to go together. If goats let me trim their feet and will mix with mine then that's good enough - i only keep them as pets. I'll keep you posted - BTW - i have horned & unhorned together and never had a problem unless one was poorly and getting bullied but then i just split them up - personally i prefer to see them with horns ... :)
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My pygmy goats are all horned - and one of my big females. The big castrated boys were disbudded before they came to me, but someone made a poor job of it, and they are always getting knocks to their horns.