The Best Goats for Milk on the Homestead (Top 5 Dairy Goat Breeds)

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 22

  • @rdallc68
    @rdallc68 3 месяца назад +2

    I appreciate the effort to attempt to educate unfamiliar individuals. If u r an unfamiliar individual keep researching . I’ll stop there

  • @claudiamcbride9746
    @claudiamcbride9746 11 месяцев назад +8

    Why no mention of Nubians? They can take heat better than alpine goats, are highly productive, and their milk is great for making cheese and ice cream.

    • @mamasotherdaughter4982
      @mamasotherdaughter4982 9 месяцев назад +1

      They are pretty nice!
      Personally, I prefer the laid back Lamanchas, but Nubians do have loving personalities, too.

  • @alonalanski7119
    @alonalanski7119 7 месяцев назад +9

    Some pictured goats have nothing to do with the breed she is talking about. For example Toggenburgs.

  • @gunasekharreddy8196
    @gunasekharreddy8196 28 дней назад

    Hi

  • @amberemma6136
    @amberemma6136 10 месяцев назад +4

    Nigerian and pygmy goats are not unknown how they got here. They all basically can be traced back to them being directly imported into an American zoo originally intended to be feeder goats for other animals in the zoo. After They were brought over the zoo keepers fell in love with their quirky personalitys and then Decided to use them in a petting zoo. They were all brought over as one breed but the zookeepers noticed that there were two distinctly different breeds in that lot and named the second group Pygmys. Most all goats in America of those breeds (especially registered stock) can be directly linked back to that group of goats.

  • @roseannenorman7129
    @roseannenorman7129 Год назад +1

    I'd like to know which are heat hardy and how to keep them from destroying the yard.

    • @azsunburns
      @azsunburns 4 месяца назад

      All goats will destroy a yard. Fencing. Our pygmies, Nigerian & Nubian are all heat the hardy

  • @ikitklaw-ls1wh
    @ikitklaw-ls1wh 5 месяцев назад +2

    Sorry, but you aren't showing the correct pictures for the goat breeds!

  • @kidvinie6491
    @kidvinie6491 10 месяцев назад

    Novice question...Do you have to milk them every day or could you miss miss a day or two?

    • @NorthlandSLC
      @NorthlandSLC 8 месяцев назад +2

      Every day if you don’t have their babies with them. If no babies then twice a day 12 hour apart and if you skip they will be in great pain imagine over filling a balloon. They will get serious infection called mastitis and you may loose the goat. However you can “kid share” which is when you pen the babies up separately at night before the day you want to milk. Milk the goat in the morning and then put her with the babies for the rest of the day. Then you can milk or not milk. Don’t pen up babies until they are at least 2-3 weeks old since they need to nurse a lot at first. You will get less milk with kid sharing but it’s more flexible.
      We have high production sables that are over 1.5 gallons per day and we kid share so we can still have a life. I’ve had several breeds and the lower production ones like Nigerian just didn’t give enough to make the work worth the trouble. High production milk star sable and saanens with kid sharing is our happy place. When we do milk we get half a gallon each on demand.

    • @kidvinie6491
      @kidvinie6491 7 месяцев назад

      @@NorthlandSLC Great information. Much appreciated

  • @RMPatriot4America
    @RMPatriot4America 5 месяцев назад

    At the 2:24 mark she says, "Milk from Alpine COWS is perfect for manufacturing ice cream, goat cheese, and ..." are we just reading a script here....I had the Nubians....good, friendly animals.

  • @mohamadrof4989
    @mohamadrof4989 11 месяцев назад

    ☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️

  • @Kd4stt.
    @Kd4stt. 10 месяцев назад +1

    This is not an accurate explanation of dairy goats.
    Understandably, a Nigerian goat is small. However, 1 to 2 quarts of milk is not impressive as far as real dairy goats are concerned.

    • @eowyn-faramir-reads
      @eowyn-faramir-reads 9 месяцев назад

      I'm looking into a dairy goat- one single goat at this time. Five thousand feet up, but Arizona. Whats your recommendation for a real dairy goat? I'm not interested in Nigerian or pygmies, honestly.

    • @NorthlandSLC
      @NorthlandSLC 8 месяцев назад

      Nubians are more heat tolerant but Swiss are from high altitude mountains. We have sables which are colored saanens, Swiss breeds. They are hardy for us but we are way north where it gets -20 in winter and 100s in summer. But boy they produce. We get good stock show goats that put out 1.5 gallons per day consistently. About 1/2 gallon once a day if we kid share.
      Oh add that you cannot keep just one goat, they are herd animals. One goat will go insane and not thrive. You must have two minimum.

    • @Kd4stt.
      @Kd4stt. 7 месяцев назад

      @@eowyn-faramir-reads Lamancha, Saanen, Nubian in this order

  • @johnberry1107
    @johnberry1107 10 месяцев назад

    We'd rather handle cows. Many reasons. Stay safe.

  • @lemonn_tineee668
    @lemonn_tineee668 Год назад

    LOL goats are the least hardy animal I've ever met

    • @AnimeFan-vr3dp
      @AnimeFan-vr3dp Год назад

      Bravisimo loser ! Goats you saw was kept incorrectly ! My grandma's goats and all goats I've ever had seen (about 300 ) were hardy and healthy cause from the beginning of their lives they were kept in right environment !