Hykue
Chillin' with the herd
Ok, so I know that the title simply describes a capability of nearly every goat, but I'm hoping someone can tell me if I can expect this for the rest of her natural life . . . I got two goats a week ago, from two different breeders. One of them used to live here, as she belonged to the previous owners of the house (this is Dot). The other one was a bottle baby (this is Dash). Dot is eight and Dash is just over one year old. The fencing here kept in a herd of 14 or so goats for a few years. Just for safety and less probability of escape, I kept the goats in the smaller upper pasture, where the fence is the most sound. It's page wire, with small logs across the top, from 5 to 6 feet tall.
Dash escaped two nights ago while we were walking our dogs. She came down the driveway to meet us as we were on our way home. She doesn't have any interest in escaping and running amok, only in escaping and finding her humans. I think that she is sure she is a human and can't figure out why we keep locking her in a pen with only a goat for company. The place that she escaped (as I deduced from the trail in the grass) was the only part of the fence that didn't have page wire, but it had rails spaced 6-12 inches apart. Thinking she might have crawled through, I put up page wire over this section. She didn't get out all day yesterday, leading me to believe that I had found the solution. Then in the evening, at about the same time as the previous night, she escaped again. I put her back in the pen and walked back out of sight to watch where she was getting out. By the time I turned around and looked, she was about 20 feet behind me. I put her back in the pen and tried to get behind the barn, where I figured she was coming from, but I was too slow. I came to the house and asked my mother-in-law to hide behind the barn and watch where she got out when I put her back in the pen. She was climbing the bit of fence that I had fixed, which has a slight lean. I have never actually built a fence, so I hoped we could fix it by leaning poles against it that overhang the pen, providing a visual barrier and some physical barrier. We did that this morning. Within 5 minutes she was out again.
I have a couple of questions.
1) Will she ever accept Dot as being an acceptable herd? She was living in a large herd of goats, far away from the house at her last place. She seemed very happy to see humans whenever she did, but as far as I know she wasn't trekking up to the house. In fact, they specifically mentioned that she hadn't ever been up in their yard.
2) Will she calm down some once she has her own kids? I'm planning to breed them both in the fall.
3) What can I do about this? I have her locked in the barn right now, because I don't want her to learn that when she escapes she gets to stay out. Also, I have two dogs here right now that think that deer (and therefore goats) are for chasing. I'm training the dogs, but they're not there yet.
My immediate options, as I see them, are these:
A) Keep Dash in the barn except when I can stay in the pasture with her. I'm not too fond of this one, because I have other things to do, and I'm afraid it would reinforce her belief that she should be by my side at all times.
B) Put up a taller section of fence, which doesn't lean, where she's been escaping. This doesn't solve the problem of her trying to escape, but does cut off one avenue of escape.
C) Put up electric just inside the page wire. This won't be possible for two more days when I can get to the store, and it will be kind of expensive, but the main problem with it is that I don't want to have a system that requires a constant input of electricity. Also, I don't think that it would stop her desire to escape, it would just make it unpleasant to try.
D) Somehow make her not want to come and find the humans - maybe if she had a herdmate from her previous herd, instead of big mean Dot who butts and bites her, and who she doesn't know, then she would be more interested in staying with the herdmate than coming and finding the humans. The problem with this plan is that I only wanted to buy two goats, and then breed them for my future herd. I don't want more than three or four milkers, maximum, and I might have a hard time figuring out what to do with the kids even if I have just three. Also, I'm not sure it would work.
E) Return Dash to the breeder and trade her in for a LESS friendly goat? This one just seems silly, and I'm not even sure they'd take her back, I probably wouldn't if I were them. I guess I will at least call them and ask for their advice, too.
Are there F's and G's that I haven't thought of? Any suggestions about which of these you would do? I thought a bottle baby would be easier to work with, and in some ways she is (I can lead her right up to my dog to work on my dog training), but I can't constantly have her with me, or constantly be battling to keep her in.
Thanks for any input!
Dash escaped two nights ago while we were walking our dogs. She came down the driveway to meet us as we were on our way home. She doesn't have any interest in escaping and running amok, only in escaping and finding her humans. I think that she is sure she is a human and can't figure out why we keep locking her in a pen with only a goat for company. The place that she escaped (as I deduced from the trail in the grass) was the only part of the fence that didn't have page wire, but it had rails spaced 6-12 inches apart. Thinking she might have crawled through, I put up page wire over this section. She didn't get out all day yesterday, leading me to believe that I had found the solution. Then in the evening, at about the same time as the previous night, she escaped again. I put her back in the pen and walked back out of sight to watch where she was getting out. By the time I turned around and looked, she was about 20 feet behind me. I put her back in the pen and tried to get behind the barn, where I figured she was coming from, but I was too slow. I came to the house and asked my mother-in-law to hide behind the barn and watch where she got out when I put her back in the pen. She was climbing the bit of fence that I had fixed, which has a slight lean. I have never actually built a fence, so I hoped we could fix it by leaning poles against it that overhang the pen, providing a visual barrier and some physical barrier. We did that this morning. Within 5 minutes she was out again.
I have a couple of questions.
1) Will she ever accept Dot as being an acceptable herd? She was living in a large herd of goats, far away from the house at her last place. She seemed very happy to see humans whenever she did, but as far as I know she wasn't trekking up to the house. In fact, they specifically mentioned that she hadn't ever been up in their yard.
2) Will she calm down some once she has her own kids? I'm planning to breed them both in the fall.
3) What can I do about this? I have her locked in the barn right now, because I don't want her to learn that when she escapes she gets to stay out. Also, I have two dogs here right now that think that deer (and therefore goats) are for chasing. I'm training the dogs, but they're not there yet.
My immediate options, as I see them, are these:
A) Keep Dash in the barn except when I can stay in the pasture with her. I'm not too fond of this one, because I have other things to do, and I'm afraid it would reinforce her belief that she should be by my side at all times.
B) Put up a taller section of fence, which doesn't lean, where she's been escaping. This doesn't solve the problem of her trying to escape, but does cut off one avenue of escape.
C) Put up electric just inside the page wire. This won't be possible for two more days when I can get to the store, and it will be kind of expensive, but the main problem with it is that I don't want to have a system that requires a constant input of electricity. Also, I don't think that it would stop her desire to escape, it would just make it unpleasant to try.
D) Somehow make her not want to come and find the humans - maybe if she had a herdmate from her previous herd, instead of big mean Dot who butts and bites her, and who she doesn't know, then she would be more interested in staying with the herdmate than coming and finding the humans. The problem with this plan is that I only wanted to buy two goats, and then breed them for my future herd. I don't want more than three or four milkers, maximum, and I might have a hard time figuring out what to do with the kids even if I have just three. Also, I'm not sure it would work.
E) Return Dash to the breeder and trade her in for a LESS friendly goat? This one just seems silly, and I'm not even sure they'd take her back, I probably wouldn't if I were them. I guess I will at least call them and ask for their advice, too.
Are there F's and G's that I haven't thought of? Any suggestions about which of these you would do? I thought a bottle baby would be easier to work with, and in some ways she is (I can lead her right up to my dog to work on my dog training), but I can't constantly have her with me, or constantly be battling to keep her in.
Thanks for any input!