Southern by choice
Herd Master
A couple of things- One she may need thiamine
Goats not wanting to eat or sluggish may be deficient in this... yes you can have 2-3-4-5 goats in a litter and only one have this issue.
Sometimes a goat that was exposed the meconium may have ingested and they end up sick from it... many die within the first few ays
Sometimes there is an internal issues, a birth defect, that you cannot see but is causing the problem
Sometimes a cleft pallet will cause them to be unable to eat
When the breeder sold you the goats did the breeder already have them trained fully to the bottle ( you may have already said this but refresh my memory)
Lastly- there are some goats born that are just a "failure to thrive" goat- they do happen.
Years ago we had a doe kid twins- first was big and robust, 2nd was tiny and NOT robust. There was meconium as well.
The second doe was just sluggish, not lifting head etc... no matter what would not take a bottle...
We knew she would not make it.
Day 3 she died in our arms.
We immediately took her to Rollins Lab ( our state diagnostics lab) for $10 we had her necropsied to find out why.
Sometimes they can tell and sometimes they can't (like the failure to thrive- nothing comes up)
In our case the meconium did cause aspiration and that was the cause BUT the vets said she would have died anyway!
What!
They said anywhere from 3-6 weeks she would have died because she had underdeveloped kidneys.
They put that in a worldwide database... no known genetic /heritable cause.... just one of those "crap happens"
I was very glad I had the necropsy done, one it gave me idea of what was wrong.... but two if the meconium never happened and she was "normal" but died 3-6 weeks later I would have been mortified.
I was glad it wasn't a deficiency or something that I could or MIGHT have been able to have corrected with the pregnant doe.
Anyway I share this because sometimes people need to know that despite our best efforts sometimes goats don't make it.
Sometimes it just devastates a person and leaves them wondering and feeling some kind of guilt.
I sure hope things work out for you. This is a great community and we really care about goats, their humans, hardships, joys, etc.
Hope you stick around regardless of outcome.
Goats not wanting to eat or sluggish may be deficient in this... yes you can have 2-3-4-5 goats in a litter and only one have this issue.
Sometimes a goat that was exposed the meconium may have ingested and they end up sick from it... many die within the first few ays
Sometimes there is an internal issues, a birth defect, that you cannot see but is causing the problem
Sometimes a cleft pallet will cause them to be unable to eat
When the breeder sold you the goats did the breeder already have them trained fully to the bottle ( you may have already said this but refresh my memory)
Lastly- there are some goats born that are just a "failure to thrive" goat- they do happen.
Years ago we had a doe kid twins- first was big and robust, 2nd was tiny and NOT robust. There was meconium as well.
The second doe was just sluggish, not lifting head etc... no matter what would not take a bottle...
We knew she would not make it.
Day 3 she died in our arms.
We immediately took her to Rollins Lab ( our state diagnostics lab) for $10 we had her necropsied to find out why.
Sometimes they can tell and sometimes they can't (like the failure to thrive- nothing comes up)
In our case the meconium did cause aspiration and that was the cause BUT the vets said she would have died anyway!
What!
They said anywhere from 3-6 weeks she would have died because she had underdeveloped kidneys.
They put that in a worldwide database... no known genetic /heritable cause.... just one of those "crap happens"
I was very glad I had the necropsy done, one it gave me idea of what was wrong.... but two if the meconium never happened and she was "normal" but died 3-6 weeks later I would have been mortified.
I was glad it wasn't a deficiency or something that I could or MIGHT have been able to have corrected with the pregnant doe.
Anyway I share this because sometimes people need to know that despite our best efforts sometimes goats don't make it.
Sometimes it just devastates a person and leaves them wondering and feeling some kind of guilt.
I sure hope things work out for you. This is a great community and we really care about goats, their humans, hardships, joys, etc.
Hope you stick around regardless of outcome.