I agree with @muddy75 on the “see no touch” method, since she’s so much smaller they’ll probably still bully her, but if they’re adjacent for a while they should at least get used to herI have a question for people who are more experienced with goats. We have two 1-year-old Saanen-Alpine does with massive horns, who weigh at least 100 pounds each. We also recently got a tiny doeling, Violet, who is mostly Nigerian Dwarf, but one of her great-grandparents was a Nubian. She's six weeks old now. Her mother apparently weighed about 75 pounds, and her father weighed only 30 pounds. She was also the runt of triplets (Though she's in good health) and her siblings were at least twice her size. She does have horns, but they're small, of course, and she's just a little bigger than our cat. Also, our setup is a bit odd- we have a small pen and a few stalls in our barn that our goats usually get to roam in, but they also have a huge pasture with an electric fence when we are able to supervise them. (One of them likes to crawl through the electric fence and getting zapped only makes her hurry even more) So, we're wondering when we should introduce Violet to her big sisters, and how to do so. She is currently sleeping in the the stall adjacent to one of the other goat stalls, and we take her walks around the property, but we'd like her to spend most of her time with the other girls. We'd also like to minimize bullying, because we don't want her to get injured. Thanks.
