A while back, I bought a mini horse/donkey/small pony cart to use with Pete before he decided to get deathly skinny over his first serious adult rut and kind of canceled that plan. It came with a harness. The original owner was an Amish guy with a mini donkey. The seller bought it from him to use with her daughter and her pony. Daughter lost interest in horses and the mother was respecting that and letting her move on so off the cart and pony were going. So today this after noon when it was only 90 and not 96 and everyone was calm but not stressed I got out Hera and decided to try it on her.
Turns out mini donkeys, no matter how wispy the seller who has a fat pony says they are, are much fatter than extra large female dairy goats. She thought the donkey harness would fit so she threw it in for free instead of throwing it in the trash because it was old. Hera would have to be morbidly obese for that harness to fit even on the smallest settings. So I guess I'm getting a goat harness. I might also want to get a smaller goat cart for looks. This cart is extremely light and well balanced so when loaded it only takes balance and gentle pull from the animal in harness, but it looks funny and it will look funnier loaded up with any passenger. (My three year old can pick it up and pull it so we have to hide it from him or he will take the pony cart and drag it off to parts unknown. Three year old is smaller than Hera or any goat I have currently.) I like the big wheels though. Big wheels = less hard to pull on gravel and easier on bumps (although cart as suspension for the driver)
So I slithered Hera out of that harness without unbuckling it and put her away. Or tried to.THAT was when she had a problem and put on the brakes. She was sure we were going to do something interesting and apparently liked the halter and harness. Talking her back into the pen was interesting.
Tune in next time to hear what stupid thing that won't work I try next.
Hera has the most patience and calmness for people (not with goats, she's a nasty, nasty herd queen, very dominant personality, which is probably why she went unsettled for 3 years) and most will to do things for you and gets under used. Her milk is also not great because she was unsettled for three years in her original home, bagged up, and appears to have had dry doe mastitis in that time and may have just started to get mastitis again (treated). The fibrous tissue blobs in her udder also partially obstruct the teat canals on both sides, one side making it difficult to milk, both making milk machine impossible because it vacuums the tissue balls onto the canal and seals it like a rabbit water bottle. And she leaks, probably because there's a mess in the way. She gave me 2 daughters in January, so she may be on her way to retirement as a cart goat. And her feet are very nice and upright and wide. She also has a fatty tumor in her neck and inch or so above a CL location, so I guess if her training succeeds she'll be getting surgery to get that off in the name of "looks". Too bad I didn't have my last vet who was a goat specialist do it.
Hera also has really long labors. She's one reason why I think goats should probably always kid before 3-4 years, no later than 2. And one of her hips gets incredibly loose at kidding time and makes it hard for her to walk to the point she's fallen off the milk stand...I forgot about that one. Yeah fine, I guess I'll retire Hera.