Had our ultrasounds done today (with Dora’s complete supervision as you can see) and everyone is pregnant, and while the Nubians aren’t far enough along to number babies, at least 17 will be hitting the ground! Bring on March!
….after the barn is done.
Month: January 2016
Fuzzy bed warmers
Stalls and walls and feeders, oh my!
Progress is being made, even with stomach bugs and sliced fingers.
Finally got a second hay manger built. I watched one of the Nubians get pulled away from the other one BY THE EAR by an oberhasli, and I don’t want them to be missing out on hay, especially being pregnant.
So of course they all wanted at the new manger. But I got a proper mineral feeder set up to, so bonus?
Phoenix, chiana, and Ariel are the only ones to remember “oh yeah there is hay here too”. Toddlers I tell you. Toddlers.
Joshua has reused the old stalls from the first barn to create the base walls for the milk room, and we also got the stall doors in place. We’ve decided to use a cattle panel to divide them. It allows the kidding does to see each other, and will eventually allow for one large baby pen for feeding time.
We have a pretty floor-barn part 3
So Big Tim (Kate’s daddy) came over to help with laying the final part of the floor and move the appliances in. Everything fits great! Except the oven range. Anyone need a perfectly working retro whirlpool range?
Laying down that second layer of plywood because we overbuild at Goatroper
(ok Joshua overbuilds. I use cable ties and duck tape whenever possible)
Ready for laminate!
Lots of spraying with the super sticky stuff, thanks to Philip and Kate’s momma
BOOM! Look at that pretty floor. Probably the cleanest it will ever be
Then the appliances, and fences to protect from overly curious goats. We have a second milk stand to put in there, but the range takes up too much space. Plans change, and that’s ok!
We are also brainstorming ideas for kid warming stations. I like all the ones below, especially the white water crate ones. But we already have the parts for the blue water barrel one, so I know that one will be made.
Fancy barn stuff continued…
The concrete is dry and cured!
So we immediately put stuff on it to start building the floor for the milking parlor.
Joshua using some of the freecycle lumber to frame out the floor. He’s so handsome, it makes my heart flutter.
I was in charge of the chop saw….
…and kept all my fingers, in addition to properly cutting (most) of the wood.
And the base for the floor is laid! Tomorrow is plywood, and then we start on walls. We wanna give a shout out to a GRF friend and customer Deb, who helped us out with a generous Home Depot gift of all the new wood for the floor. She rocks!
Also, I discovered the oberhasli girls weren’t allowing anyone else to eat at the hay feeder except Dora, so I quickly made one from a dog kennel. That they all fought over and ignored the actual feeder.
Apparently this is what having a room full of toddlers with toys is like. But look at all those bellies starting to show! Poor Phoenix, the blonde with horns, I don’t know how she’s going to walk with another 86 days to go.
Goats versus zombies
Some days owning a goat farm is not unlike an episode of “The Walking Dead”. Someone leaves the gate unsecured, suddenly they’re everywhere they’re not supposed to be, you have to use food to put them back where they’re supposed to be, and all the while you’re freaking out about them getting in the geraniums
Fancy as all get out barn part 1
So we decided at this new barn we wanted a concrete base with drains in the stall areas for easy cleanup Inbetween kiddings. Today we poured the cement! It should be set up around July or so…
Nice dry flat base of lime treated clay and gravel, plus wire for good grippage
Thank goodness for rented cement mixers
Lots of spreading, raking, and cussing from Joshua and Daddy later…
Beautiful cement floors with goat kid safe drains. 30 bags of quikcrete total. It will probably take a week or so to completely cure in these cold temps. Which is fine, because next we start on the milking room itself!
Rainy Day Work
Well, it’s raining. Again. Which kinda limits the projects we can get done around the place since our ground is this lovely combination of clay and sponge.
However progress was made! Can’t hold a little Goatroper down.
Joshua got the double stall area prepped for concrete to be poured tomorrow. He spread lime and left it work on the water, then smoothed the now not-mush flat. He also got the breaker box hung and ready for a sunny day to start wiring up (also not safe to wire things in a thunderstorm).
I cleaned up bedding and put down fresh, checked eyelids to see if anyone needed deworming, and discovered two new cases of the sore mouth had sprung up. Now in the girl paddock, yaaaaay.
Ariel and Kardashian were a little paler than I liked, so I hit them with a Dose of quest plus to treat any barberpole worms plus tapes. I’ll do a follow up in a week. No one enjoyed this but I would rather have cranky healthy mommas than sick ones. Ariel is our old girl so I pay extra attention to how she is doing.
And I built a hay feeder! Made completely from found and freecycle materials. It’s less wasteful and allows for more girls to eat at one time.
A partial pallet with a piece of thin plywood and chicken wire on the open side make up the back of the feeder.
The front is simply the cattle panel as a structural support for the chain link that was their old feeder stretched across it.
NONOMNOM. And look at those big momma bellies. Love them ❤
the boys got a new feeder too, not as complicated but it allows for all the different heights to have access without shoving. It’s essentially a giant chain link hammock, wit a tub below it to catch dropped hay.
It’s also where I stick ruperts feed bucket because he can eat without harassment. It’s good to be the king. And enormous.
Super Fun Times
You know whats even more fun than treating teenage bucks for soremouth?
Treating a full grown, 275 lb Buck for soremouth. SO EXCITING!
(Lots of Sarcasm)
The following has kinda icky pictures that will make you itchy. Look at your own scratchy risk. Also, We are Not Vets. This is what works for us, and if its doesn’t work for you, not all viruses will respond the same.
Soremouth, or Orf in humans, is in the same viral family as the Chicken Pox virus. And the treatment is about the same-keep the patient comfortable, hasten the symptoms, and don’t try to catch it! It happens in almost every herd, just like every kindergarten class. So when it happens, don’t panic! You aren’t a bad goat owner, you just own goats. And like giant toddlers, they are gonna catch a bug or two. Generally Once a goat has it, they wont have another outbreak, unless the viral strain is radically different.
A goat can catch soremouth when its a kid, and then not have an outbreak until they are an adult. Its no fun for the goat or the handler. Nasty scabs along the mouth, and sometimes around the eyes and hoof line. The only time this virus is truly dangerous is when it goes thru a herd with nursing does. They can get it on the udders which makes it painful for the kids to nurse, which means the kids can literally starve to death.
There is a vaccine, but its a “live” vaccine and only prevents that particular strain from infecting the goat herd. We have had it twice, both after bringing in new goats, once after a 30 day quarantine. This new strain is affecting the buck pen, and has a lovely side effect of causing thick nasal congestion and drainage. So my poor boys not only have painful mouths, they have snotty noses. You try and teach a goat to blow into a tissue. Trust me, they wont. So yay wet wipes and those baby snot bulb things.

The treatment regimen we use seems to hasten the active time of the disease, causing the scabs to dry up and fall off in 1-2 weeks instead of a month or more. 99% DO NOT REMOVE THE SCABS. This is cause an open wound, bleeding, and possible infection. However, sometimes the scabs can grow so thick, especially at the corner of the mouth, it makes it hard for the animal to open their mouth and eat. John Crichton was literally crying in pain when he tried to eat, even with soft food, so we did some strategic removal. He was immediately much more comfortable. But again, this is a rare situation.
Make sure any time you handle a goat with soremouth you use latex gloves and wash after, because HUMANS CAN CATCH IT. Dogs can catch it, Cats, walruses, any mammal. But goats and sheep are the most susceptible.
If you want to do what we do, get the following for the treatment. We have to go to a specialty drug store locally called Drug Emporium, but amazon has the items as well.
Gentian Violet
Tea Tree Oil
Oregano Oil
We purchase the small blue spray bottles located usually on the same aisle as the essential oils. Gentian Violet goes on first because it acts as an antiseptic to prevent infection, especially from Staph. Next Tea Tree and Oregano, either mixed together or separate. We do them separate because the oregano does sting and we try to focus it only on the worst parts.
You will have purple, cranky goats that will run at the sight of gloves and a blue bottle, but they will be much much happier when its all gone. Our first case started the day after Christmas, and Pilot is now completely sore free. Chrichton and Red Baron are on the road to recovery, and poor Rupert has just begun, and got it around his eye. Of course Zeus and D’Argo, our pet mutt goats, got nuttin. Sigh.


















