MyKidLuvsGreenEgz
Lovin' The Homestead
Is that really $15 for a 100 pound bale of alfalfa hay? Here in Colorado alfalfa is $11 for a small 20 pound bale. Up from $7 last year.I figured up the highest I have seen alfalfa hay for a 100 lb bale which is 15 $.
I have mini goats. Two nigerian dwarf girls/does, one nigerian dwarf wether, and one la mancha/nigerian dwarf buck. Yes, he's a bit stinky about 4 months out of the year.
During the summer, I feed the boys almost nothing, as they pasture in a small paddock we built in the leach field behind our house. During the Winter they get total 2 flakes of alfalfa hay a day. The buck is earning his keep by impregnation but after he does his duty next October, we'll either trade him for a new one (to prevent crossbreeding his kids) or eat him. This coming Spring or early Summer, we'll eat the wether if we get a boy from this group.
Plan to no longer sell any boy goats. Bought a banding kit so we can castrate all shortly after birth. Raise and when they are big enough, we'll butcher. Supposedly tastes just like beef. Since we don't eat a lot of meat, and my son doesn't eat any meat besides bacon and poultry and eggs, it's basically just for hubby, me and sometimes the dog.
My two pregnant girls get feed in the morning (milo, barley, etc) and 2 alfalfa flakes in the evening. One regularly gives birth to 4 kids and the other had 2 this Summer. Both are due to kid around Thanksgiving. We plan to keep one girl and like I said above, all boys.
The two girls provide enough milk for my lactose-intolerant husband .. drinking milk and farmers cheese. Sometimes I make yogurt, which my son loves. Plus goats are easier to milk with my carpal-tunnel hands, and easier for my hyper kid to handle.
Yes they are escape artists but we've found we can contain them with 6' tall t-posts every 5 feet, 4 feet tall welded wire on the bottom, a little netting 2 feet above than, and 2x8 osb boards across the bottom. The boards are because they like to rub against anything to scratch itches so the boards prevent them from pushing and stretching the fencing. Provide something for them to climb on like rocks or boards or tubs and that prevents them from getting hoof rot.
Since they really don't eat a LOT of hay, especially in the summer, it's easier to be self-sufficient. For us. We only have 2 acres. This coming year we'll be growing small areas of alfalfa and milo for them. AND they'll get the corn stalks and other garden refuse like winter squash vines, and some mini pumpkins. They also love tumbleweed and other weeds which we have plenty of. Later, when our apple trees and grape vines are producing, they'll get some of them too, especially the girls.
We might still get a dexter cow later but around here, even out in the country, nobody has them but almost everyone has goats and regular sized cows. Would be difficult to breed her.
Just my two cents.