Management of bucklings

Coolbreeze89

Loving the herd life
Joined
May 13, 2018
Messages
187
Reaction score
349
Points
173
Location
Central Texas
I have 8 ND kids that are all ~2weeks old (4 bucklings/4 doelings). A couple of the bucklings are getting quite rowdy, mounting the doelings and generally causing some havoc. I plan to wether them all. I’d like to let the moms nurse and wean them all at 4 months-ish (I don’t milk the goats and will not re-breed anyone as my DH has said I have enough goats now!). :)

Goal for banding for urethral development is to wait “as long as possible”, but ~12 weeks? What if they start extending before this? Can I do at 10 weeks of extension starts? 8 weeks? How long after banding are they fertile? (I read three weeks? This seems like a long time!). Do I keep them away from mom after banding, thereby forcing weaning? Is this concern about fertility this young overblown?

Now that the babies are here, the details seem much more complicated than my reading beforehand!
 

lalabugs

True BYH Addict
Joined
Jul 27, 2016
Messages
627
Reaction score
798
Points
203
I personally band at 8 weeks. Have not had a problem with the wethers. My oldest are 5 years old. I've had a 4 month old ND breed our does before. I would not wait until 12 weeks, especially with them being in with does & doelings. I've helped a lady i know pull a huge doeling out of her 7 month old mini lamancha. That means the doe got bred at 2 months old. If you want to wait to band. I would separate them.
 

Nommie Bringeruvda Noms

Loving the herd life
Joined
Sep 19, 2019
Messages
70
Reaction score
159
Points
113
Ohhh, this is good to read, before we get to this point! Thank you for this thread, Coolbreeze!! I'm not even sure my (Nigora) girls are pregnant, yet, and already have a request for a buckling (it would be f2). I read somewhere, that it wasn't unheard of for bucklings to be able to reproduce as early as 4wks. I thought that had to be wrong - but, if it's correct, it looks like I'll start bottle feeding any bucklings at about 3weeks! I want milk, anyway, but had thought to let them have it all for the first month. Raising goats didn't seem such a complicated thing, for shepards, a hundred years ago...
 

Coolbreeze89

Loving the herd life
Joined
May 13, 2018
Messages
187
Reaction score
349
Points
173
Location
Central Texas
Ohhh, this is good to read, before we get to this point! Thank you for this thread, Coolbreeze!! I'm not even sure my (Nigora) girls are pregnant, yet, and already have a request for a buckling (it would be f2). I read somewhere, that it wasn't unheard of for bucklings to be able to reproduce as early as 4wks. I thought that had to be wrong - but, if it's correct, it looks like I'll start bottle feeding any bucklings at about 3weeks! I want milk, anyway, but had thought to let them have it all for the first month. Raising goats didn't seem such a complicated thing, for shepards, a hundred years ago...

Love your name!!
 

frustratedearthmother

Herd Master
Joined
May 7, 2013
Messages
7,983
Reaction score
14,412
Points
623
it looks like I'll start bottle feeding any bucklings at about 3weeks!
Just a suggestion - but if you anticipate bottle feeding you may want to start at birth or at most a day or so old. It's often times extremely hard to get a kid to start taking a bottle at three weeks.
 

Nommie Bringeruvda Noms

Loving the herd life
Joined
Sep 19, 2019
Messages
70
Reaction score
159
Points
113
Love your name!!
Thank you, lol! Hubs gave it to me, years ago. Whenever he is talking about me, to the critters, he calls me 'Nommie'. The first time he did it, I looked at him like he was crazy, until he said to me, "because you're the Bringer uvda Noms!" I just busted up laughing, and it's stuck, ever since, lol
 
Last edited:

Mini Horses

Herd Master
Joined
Sep 4, 2015
Messages
9,470
Reaction score
30,065
Points
728
Location
S coastal VA
When they nurse, that is what they WANT to do. While it can be changed, most do not co-operate well. Like FEM says, right away is best. OH, they can be retrained but, you will both hate each other by the time it happens.

You can separate does & bucklings...with moms. Or? Mixed sets are the issue. Yep, some can get pregnant at an early age. Not good. Welcome to goat issues.

They are cute and ornery!
 
Top