Tuesday, March 22, 2016

Be Afraid. Be Very Afraid.

Two things I learned tonight...
First, there exists between cats and goats a relationship of selective and mutual terror.
Second, when falling from a great height, goats (unlike cats) do not always land on their feet.


 Many afternoons when I take the goats for a walk, this sweet kitty tags along with us. A foursome, we meander along the creek while Em and Ellie graze, cat and goats in close proximity and seemingly unmindful of each other. However, when the goats are on the deck, Tabby runs from them in fear, usually cowering in the house until they are put away. Given the weight difference, I can almost understand this. (Actually, I'm still wary of Emerson-the-Attack-Goat most days...)

What I cannot comprehend, though, is why the reverse is also true. Whenever the goats spy little Tabby near the house, they startle and flee. Or hurl themselves off tall buildings, as happened tonight.


Elliot was calmly snacking on top of his wooden house, about 3 and 1/2 feet high. Suddenly, Scary Kitty ambled by, so frightening Ellie that he hurled himself backward off the roof (never mind that a four foot high chain link fence separated him from the ferocious feline!). He landed horribly on his back and left side, stunned in an awkward, twisted position on the driveway and also drenched by a bucket of warm water which took part of the impact. Heart racing, I helped him upright, dismayed to see that he would not put any weight on his back left leg. Oh, Ellie...

Now an hour later, he is resting. He did tentatively walk a bit on that leg after some soothing care and an extra handful of orange peels from my pocket. I'll see what tomorrow brings.

And the next time Emerson tries to attack me, I know just what to do...MEOW!!

Friday, March 11, 2016

Got Goats - Now What??

Next week will mark the four-year anniversary of the day we brought our goats home - a muddy spring afternoon when two bouncy kids weaseled their way into our hearts and launched our family from normalcy into an adventure of endless chaos. We knew very little about goats and had absolutely no idea what we were getting into, and while we are still far from experts, there are certainly a few things Em and Ellie have taught us over the past four years. (I give them all the credit!)

First, goats are farm animals. No matter how much you want them to be pets, their needs and nature will never be like your dog and cat. We're making it work, but it hasn't been easy.

Goats reach their full weight at age three. Elliot weighed 75 pounds in 2013, but the challenges of using a bathroom scale for this have prevented any further attempts. We use an estimated weight of 80 pounds for med dosing. Emerson is about ten pounds lighter.

An average goat lifespan is twelve years, though "well-cared-for" goats can live to be twenty. I do the math every time they (or I!) have a birthday!

Goats are afraid of the dark. Skeptical when I first read this, we devised a few experiments, and it is definitely true. (My guilt over this was assuaged when my husband ran electric to their shed for a nightlight.)

My goats finish a bale of hay every six days in the winter, about every three weeks when they can graze outside. Their diet also includes black-oil sunflower seeds, goat mineral mix, baking soda, a scant amount of grain, locust tree pods, animal crackers and dried orange peels.

Goats prefer their water warmed, especially with a shot of apple cider vinegar. They will rarely drink water cooler than 60 degrees F. I heat a teapot on the stove every morning. Bribery works too - Ellie will gulp a whole bowl of warm water if I stand next to him with a handful of animal crackers for a reward. Adequate hydration is critical for wethers (neutered males) due to the risk of urinary calculi, a usually-fatal condition which is still my greatest fear.

Other preventative measures for urinary health include avoiding any corn products or alfalfa hay, using grain (in scant amounts) and minerals which contain ammonium chloride supplements and encouraging frequent elimination. (Yes, my goats will "pee" on command when reminded...)

Goats can be litter-box trained. Em and Ellie did this themselves, choosing the tray of hay I wanted them to sleep in. They will still "go" outside, but in the shed they always use the tray.

A good goat vet is hard to find. Much of the care you can do yourself (hoof-trimming, yearly vaccines, basic wound and skin care) but I sleep easier knowing I have that phone number on the refrigerator. I once assisted for minor surgery on a fully-anesthetized goat on an old beach blanket in our driveway.

Goats are prone to parasites and skin maladies. Just accept this. A pestilence-ridden, scabby goat can make you feel like a terrible owner, but you just have to do what you can and make the best of it.

As I have said before, goats will consume all your free time, decimate your rainy-day fund, drive away your friends and possibly make you lose your sanity. Still, you will fall in love with them and someday you be consoling them during a thunderstorm and find yourself singing them this classic from Broadway's Wicked... "Who can say if I've been changed for the better; because I knew you, I have been changed for good." 

P.S. Although, I must admit there are the occasional days (like when they learned to open the gate latch and chewed up my best sandals) when my song is different - "Loathing, unadulterated loathing..."   Gotta love you, goat boys!