I went on a farm tour, and the owner said that bucks pee all over themselves. Guess the smell attracts the ladies 

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Quote:
We bought some delicious goat milk locally and it tasted almost like cow's milk (it was Nubian) for the first 3 days or so. When it sat in the fridge for longer than that the goaty taste started to come through.
I wanted goats there for awhile but then I realized that I would never feel like getting out there to milk them...we use about 6 gallons a week in our family now. From what I have read the important thing is to taste the milk of the breed you are getting, and feed them high quality alfalfa/feed so it comes through in the milk with the taste.
I went on a farm tour, and the owner said that bucks pee all over themselves. Guess the smell attracts the ladies![]()
I went on a farm tour, and the owner said that bucks pee all over themselves. Guess the smell attracts the ladies![]()
Owning dairy goats is really getting into farming proper. They require a lot more hands on care than chickens. We have goats, and it is true they are great escape artists. The only fencing that will keep them in is either small guage wire mesh, at least 6 feet high, or livestock electric mesh fencing. They will need good housing, fairly substantial and draught/water free. If the winters are severe, they will need to be kept inside a barn, as they can freeze to death in the harshest weather. We pack their house with straw and use a heat lamp on nights when it gets below -10 centigrade. They spend their days in the winter in a stable. A dairy goat will need milking twice a day. As well as grazing, they need a good quality goat mix, for essential vitemines/minerals. For three goats we buy a £12 bag every 3 weeks. In the winter, we feed them on haylage, they need about 5 pounds a day. As you can see, unless you have a passion for goats milk, and or cheese, it's unlikely that you will break even. I say do your research first before you commit to them. Good luck anyway
My mini lamancha milk is so sweet and mild. Yummy! At this point I am gonna pay to have someone cover my ladies. I may get a buck in he future. We have a few acres for the stench though. lol I have a standard lamancha and she is so darn sweet!!!
Oh! I also wanted to tell you about the hand milker that I saw recommended for the smaller goats...it was akin to a manual pump that humans use for expressing milk. I forget the brand name but if interested you can search for goat hand pump milker or something like that. Apparently if the teats are really tiny like with mini-Nubians and Nigerian Dwarfs (also I heard have good milk), it can be so much easier because you can only get a couple fingers around the teat from what I read.
http://udderlyez.com/
FOUND IT!!!![]()
(I talked to one girl from Craigslist when I called about her goats and she said she used it with her NDs and it made milking so much easier.)
Somehow this duplicated itself...unless I made a boo boo- please note my comment at the bottom of the above quote...I tried to edit and not start another post.