babsbag
Herd Master
I have bred many a daughter to their sire with no ill effects. I won't do it a second generation. I have also done the lute.
We bred a half brother and sister this year but it wasn't an accidentI have bred many a daughter to their sire with no ill effects. I won't do it a second generation. I have also done the lute.
@frustratedearthmother how many generations do you keep of the offspring? I have seen a good deal of inbreeding and it seems to generally affect 2nd generation offspring as far as the "undesirable" traits coming out. The kids of the inbreeding seem fine in most cases but the next generation seems to be the one that gets the issues.
What have you found? Past few years I have watched quite a few people doing lots of experimentation and results were not good... of course I do think having basic understanding of genetics makes a difference. Not sure how knowledgeable these breeders were.
I have done this for a loooong time. When I was showing I had a herd of 50+ so I had a lot of opportunities to learn. Those were the days!
I have never had a deformed kid until this past year and it was NOT a result of inbreeding. I had a triplet with a front leg that was under-developed and locked in a bent position. Total outcross and no inbreeding involved.
I have a tendency to keep a lot of goats for their entire lives. I've got a 14 year old doe out there and I've got at least 4 generations of her offspring. They are my best goats and they produce my best goats. In fact, at this point every one of my pure pygmies are related in some way. Several years back I got a new buck, and he actually went back to my own herd, but he was a couple of generations removed. I bred him to that 14 (she was only 11 then!) year old doe and in the interim he committed suicide. So, I kept a buckling out of that breeding and he's my pygmy herdsire now. I believe in keeping it all in the family, lol.
In all seriousness, the only thing I've noticed is that over the years I've seen a slight reduction in the size of my mature animals. No other issues at all.
BUT, I have to emphasize that it pays to know your animals and be very realistic about their strengths and weaknesses. My herd is pretty well 'set' in their traits these days. I can't say that every kid is perfect and I castrate a LOT around here. But, I do know that my pygmies will have good spring of rib, width in the escutcheon, beautiful heads, and they track straight and move well. On the downside, I will admit that I have a few goats who could have a better ear set and occasionally I will have a beautiful goat who is mis-marked. Color is a big deal in pygmies and no matter how beautifully conformed a pygmy is - there are certain mis-marks that are disqualifying traits.
If you've got animals with traits you admire, I wouldn't be afraid to inbreed.