Wehner Homestead
Herd Master
I need pic updates. Just sayin'
I think Poppy and the Raina twins have grown in the last week like crazy. I cannot believe they are babies!
I’ll try to get them out and get pics today. I need to anyway!
I need pic updates. Just sayin'
I think Poppy and the Raina twins have grown in the last week like crazy. I cannot believe they are babies!
Thank you for the informed post. I can honestly say that your comment was by far the most informative and helpful. Thank you.I do not think that the problem could be lactose intolerance, but then in the wild if a baby animal was lactose intolerant it would just die, right? On the other hand, remember that while goat milk contains lactose (milk sugars) they are easier to digest because goat's milk is naturally homogenized and the protein molecules are different than cow's milk. That is why people who cannot tolerate cow milk can drink goat milk.
I would do what Stephine said and buy regular goat milk at the store - most grocery stores carry goat milk. Even though it is pasteurized it will be better. Dairy people who are on a CAE prevention regime always pasteurize goat milk before feeding the kids. Put the kids on straight goat milk, but dilute it a little with water to make it less rich. Then gradually reduce water to get them on whole goat milk. Once they are stable you can gradually add in replacer if you want.
I would change vets. There are other reasons for scours than worms. Yellow foamy scours can also be a symptom of E. Coli. I would also give a dose of probiotics - you can buy the paste from the feed store - to try to regularize the rumen.
We raised hundreds (not exaggerating!) of kids on half regular milk replacer and half goat milk and never had a problem. We were on a CAE prevention program and heat treated all colostrum and pasteurized goat milk being fed to goat kids. The trick is to change over gradually and increase amount of milk replacer slowly. We needed the goat milk for our replacement doe kids, house, and calves. Buck kids went to auction at 2 months without disbudding or castrating - ethnic market.
Hope thing go well.
Thank you, it looks like all of her problems are resolved. We do plan on starting our own back yard farm we have 4 does and will be getting 2 bucks later in the year. Now we know what to look out for we will be better able to provide the nutrition they need.I hope the kid is doing better. Keep us informed. If you breed out of the kids that had a hard time with cow's milk, keep a stock of powdered goat's milk on hand for next time. If you are prepared for the problem, in my experience LOL, it never happens again!
We raised our calves on goats' milk with no problem, raised an orphan pig to weaning, and gave goats' milk to an acquaintance who had a mare die foaling. The foal thrived on the milk until they could get the foal onto a mare's milk replacer. I know several people who keep a dairy goat just in case they lose a ewe. Everything seems to thrive on goats' milk. I pasteurized the milk for the goat kids (CAE prevention), but nothing else. We always drank it without the bother of pasteurization. Our children never had teenage acne either which is strange since unseparated goat's milk is higher in butterfat than milk you buy in the store.