Quote:
Sorta, and nope.
Yeah, you can breed a sheep and goat...if the pregnancy takes, the result is likely to be stillbirth. Even if you get a live birth, the offspring are usually infertile.
Also, a 'geep' is a sheep/goat chimera that's generally constructed in a laboratory by combining two embryos...geeps don't happen in the field.
To the OP...to me, the red flags here are as follows:
1) You found these goats at an auction. Auctions are bad, bad places to find goats. Nobody in their right mind would take their best dairy-x goats to an auction. These two were there for a reason, I suspect.
2) The current owner is guessing at fecundity...the number of babies in each goat. There's hardly a way tell if a goat's even pregnant, save for the last few weeks...let alone trying to guess how many.
3) The daughter is tiny...that's not good.
4) Crossed to a sheep?...I doubt it. God knows what they're crossed to -- IF ANYTHING. He may be trying to ply you out of $200 by promising that they're bred back.
5) He "thinks" they're bred to kid in May.. Unless you know the due dates, you can't be sure when to vaccinate, start bumping up their feed to reduce the chance of toxemia, etc.
6) Mama needs "immediate hoof trimming"...which means she likely needs a whole lot of everything else pretty immediately, too. If you can't be bothered to trim hooves (or keep your babies from being bred...or have a definite timeframe for delivery...or, or, or...), what are the chances you're setting out good mineral, keeping up on vaccinations, and all that other stuff.
7) He wants $200. You could probably buy a lot more crossbred goat for $200 from someone who actually knew what they were doing.
All in all...if this were me...and aside from the fact that I wouldn't have been at the salebarn in the first place (
)...I wouldn't touch these two with a 10' pole.
Literally.
And if I did, I'd sanitize before I went back home and touched my own goats.
Sorry.. Just being honest..
FWIW...When it comes to goats, you gotta come to the realization that you just can't save them all. If you try, you'll wind up with disease and pestilence on your farm that you may never be able to get rid of, and I mean that very seriously. If you were to bring home a sick goat who pops a CL knot and tromps it all over your plot of ground, it's pretty much game over for having goats on that land for YEARS.
I agree 100%. I say RUN, do not walk, away from this deal!
Sorta, and nope.
Yeah, you can breed a sheep and goat...if the pregnancy takes, the result is likely to be stillbirth. Even if you get a live birth, the offspring are usually infertile.
Also, a 'geep' is a sheep/goat chimera that's generally constructed in a laboratory by combining two embryos...geeps don't happen in the field.
To the OP...to me, the red flags here are as follows:
1) You found these goats at an auction. Auctions are bad, bad places to find goats. Nobody in their right mind would take their best dairy-x goats to an auction. These two were there for a reason, I suspect.
2) The current owner is guessing at fecundity...the number of babies in each goat. There's hardly a way tell if a goat's even pregnant, save for the last few weeks...let alone trying to guess how many.
3) The daughter is tiny...that's not good.
4) Crossed to a sheep?...I doubt it. God knows what they're crossed to -- IF ANYTHING. He may be trying to ply you out of $200 by promising that they're bred back.
5) He "thinks" they're bred to kid in May.. Unless you know the due dates, you can't be sure when to vaccinate, start bumping up their feed to reduce the chance of toxemia, etc.
6) Mama needs "immediate hoof trimming"...which means she likely needs a whole lot of everything else pretty immediately, too. If you can't be bothered to trim hooves (or keep your babies from being bred...or have a definite timeframe for delivery...or, or, or...), what are the chances you're setting out good mineral, keeping up on vaccinations, and all that other stuff.
7) He wants $200. You could probably buy a lot more crossbred goat for $200 from someone who actually knew what they were doing.
All in all...if this were me...and aside from the fact that I wouldn't have been at the salebarn in the first place (
Literally.
And if I did, I'd sanitize before I went back home and touched my own goats.
Sorry.. Just being honest..
FWIW...When it comes to goats, you gotta come to the realization that you just can't save them all. If you try, you'll wind up with disease and pestilence on your farm that you may never be able to get rid of, and I mean that very seriously. If you were to bring home a sick goat who pops a CL knot and tromps it all over your plot of ground, it's pretty much game over for having goats on that land for YEARS.
I agree 100%. I say RUN, do not walk, away from this deal!
