Baymule
Herd Master
Milking and grooming in the garage……how will you be cleaning it? They pee and poop everywhere they go. The poop is easy to sweep up, but you will be washing the floor for the urine. Water hose or mop bucket?
I can take it for you. It's sitting sideways in the shed so you'll have to use your imaginationGot a picture of the stand?
I think your stanchion-to-be looks good. You will probably get poo mashed into the holes... but it should power wash just fine. However... if you will be power washing it (a regular hose with one of those spray nosels should work)... maybe you want to be able to roll it out of the garage... wash it, then roll it back in???.The stanchion to be
I think what they are talking about is the square footage per goat in a communal stall. 6 x 4 would be 24 square feet. For a standard size dairy goat, that would be the amount of space she needs to lay down to sleep (goats do sleep laying down). Don't forget that you will need water and feeder space in that area too which will decrease the stall space to 4 x 4 instead of 6 x 4. When kidding she will need a lot more space since she will stretch out full length during kidding, she'll need space to drop the kid safely without it getting squashed against the wall during final contractions, to stand up and clean it off and room for the kid not to have to lay in muddy birth liquid and placenta.. Our sheep jugs are fairly small for lambing, and they are 5' x 7'. Once the lambs are a couple weeks old the jugs are too small. Smal stalls also are much harder to keep clean, stay wet and mucky during the winter, etc. We clean them out, let them dry, and lime them between lambings. During the fall and winter if they don't dry completely we have to use Dri-Stall to remove the excess soil dampness.Honestly I just put in a search engine “size of goat stalls” and 6x4