Goat Whisperer
Herd Master
I have used a prod with goats and I don't see anything wrong with it.
I don't use it on mine right now, I don't have any issues with my main bucks. They are gentlemen The prod is great when feeding or dealing with gate climbers. Usually the sound of shocking a fence post is enough to move them back.
I actually ended up with a prod after I was needed to care for a meat goat herd. The owned had recently bought a huge New Zealand buck, biggest buck I have ever been around. I told the owner that I'm not dealing with him unless I had a good prod. I could do most care taking thru the fence but when I went in I always had a prod. Thankfully he was a gentle giant.
I have been taken down before by a different buck mentioned above (not my buck) and it only took a second for this buck to hook me behind the knees and get me down to the ground and against a post. He was freezer fare anyway. I didn't have the prod with him.
I purchased a 2 yr old lamancha buck, owner said he was a sweetheart but once I got him it was clear that his affection was not sweet. He would rub his head all over people to mark. Once rut hit it escalated and he was very dangerous. Nobody goes in with him, everything is done from the other side of the fence. When he needs work, he gets tied closely to the fence with several people and usually a dog or 2. His daughters are gorgeous so he is staying for now. Sadly I don't think his owners knew how to read bucks and didn't correct issues early on.
So try the prod and see how it goes from there. He is young so you may be able to correct his issues. This is why teaching them young makes a big difference.
Please be careful around him. Try to set a pen up that you can do almost all care they the fence. I know a lady who was almost killed by a Nubian buck. She would have died had nobody been around. She wasn't new to goats either. She's been raising lamancha for over 30 years and will not go in with adult bucks.
I don't use it on mine right now, I don't have any issues with my main bucks. They are gentlemen The prod is great when feeding or dealing with gate climbers. Usually the sound of shocking a fence post is enough to move them back.
I actually ended up with a prod after I was needed to care for a meat goat herd. The owned had recently bought a huge New Zealand buck, biggest buck I have ever been around. I told the owner that I'm not dealing with him unless I had a good prod. I could do most care taking thru the fence but when I went in I always had a prod. Thankfully he was a gentle giant.
I have been taken down before by a different buck mentioned above (not my buck) and it only took a second for this buck to hook me behind the knees and get me down to the ground and against a post. He was freezer fare anyway. I didn't have the prod with him.
I purchased a 2 yr old lamancha buck, owner said he was a sweetheart but once I got him it was clear that his affection was not sweet. He would rub his head all over people to mark. Once rut hit it escalated and he was very dangerous. Nobody goes in with him, everything is done from the other side of the fence. When he needs work, he gets tied closely to the fence with several people and usually a dog or 2. His daughters are gorgeous so he is staying for now. Sadly I don't think his owners knew how to read bucks and didn't correct issues early on.
So try the prod and see how it goes from there. He is young so you may be able to correct his issues. This is why teaching them young makes a big difference.
Please be careful around him. Try to set a pen up that you can do almost all care they the fence. I know a lady who was almost killed by a Nubian buck. She would have died had nobody been around. She wasn't new to goats either. She's been raising lamancha for over 30 years and will not go in with adult bucks.