I brought home my doe in milk and one of her littles yesterday. The baby is dam-raised and still nurses.
What I’m hoping I didn’t screw up is the relationship with mama-goat. In my paranoia about her udder filling too much, I tried milking her this morning. It did not go well.
The baby (8 weeks) is with her constantly - I neither have nor want to forcibly wean Little. First mistake, as I see it, is trying to milk w/o a stanchion. It was a rodeo. Neither of us made it eight seconds.
Second, I think she probably wasn’t uncomfortable. So, getting personal in less than 24 hours may have been too much.
C. (for variety) She was separated from her herd and second baby (seller kept one of the two).
IV (again for variety) I read that goat psychology is her resistance relates to me “stealing” milk her baby needs. It makes sense to me and I hadn’t considered it.
Finally, I realized I’m not sure what uncomfortable from milk engorgement looks/sounds like.
What I think I have in my favor: I have a milk stand as of this afternoon. She leads well and comes up to me in the pasture. She is eating grain again, where she was turning away from it yesterday. If Little nurses enough to keep her comfortable, I may be stressing over nothing.
If you’re still here, Thanks!
I have decided to work on her as if she has never been milked before by reacquainting her to the stanchion and to me. Is that a sound plan? Or should I be doing something different or extra?
What I’m hoping I didn’t screw up is the relationship with mama-goat. In my paranoia about her udder filling too much, I tried milking her this morning. It did not go well.
The baby (8 weeks) is with her constantly - I neither have nor want to forcibly wean Little. First mistake, as I see it, is trying to milk w/o a stanchion. It was a rodeo. Neither of us made it eight seconds.
Second, I think she probably wasn’t uncomfortable. So, getting personal in less than 24 hours may have been too much.
C. (for variety) She was separated from her herd and second baby (seller kept one of the two).
IV (again for variety) I read that goat psychology is her resistance relates to me “stealing” milk her baby needs. It makes sense to me and I hadn’t considered it.
Finally, I realized I’m not sure what uncomfortable from milk engorgement looks/sounds like.
What I think I have in my favor: I have a milk stand as of this afternoon. She leads well and comes up to me in the pasture. She is eating grain again, where she was turning away from it yesterday. If Little nurses enough to keep her comfortable, I may be stressing over nothing.
If you’re still here, Thanks!
I have decided to work on her as if she has never been milked before by reacquainting her to the stanchion and to me. Is that a sound plan? Or should I be doing something different or extra?