Out of the corner of my eye yesterday I caught the terminal mini saanen/lamancha cross buckling picking a new mommy. This morning his real mommy is more even and the new mommy is lopsided.

When anyone dam raises in my herd a lot of my goats have no concept of "raise your own brat". The does that fight the hardest against each other and then court and "win" the babies nurse everything. If I ever exclusively dam raise things are going to be a mess and my more maternal does are going to always be sucked thin dry. They don't "steal" technically. They HORDE. It can be weeks to months after birth, long after hormones have subsided. (I have a show boar breeder that raises her goats in a very kushy way that wants any doe culls up to raising "grafts" (steals?) any time I have another I want to go because my herd has this quality). It took her 24 hours and her graft kid had a new mommy 2 weeks after freshening (she tube fed a late rejected kid for TWO WEEKS STRAIGHT, night and day)
Lots of house listing hunting going on. Looking for a home with a 2-10 acres with topography, zoning, and rules supportive of 15-25 goats around Malvern, PA is depressing. Trying to stay under a million. Goats will often get grouped with cattle in zoning. Kind of frustrating considering the does at my place max out at 160 lbs and a cow definitely does not. Totally different animal, much smaller land needs/stress on the land and a lot less in the community's face. Not a horse either. Not as much curb appeal-although again here I'm starting to get people parked on my front road strip watching my goats when I morning milk and the goats go afterward to graze the fenced in front yard-last time something like that started happening regularly it was Michigan-so I guess they have to have SOME curb appeal. Someone's going to cause an accident.
Getting tired of mud up here.
Here's narrow rumped, chronic kid over cooker Elsa. She's telling me to quit looking at her muddy butt. Her dam is to the left. I hope someday her dam gives me another doe. Summer isn't getting any younger and the only other doe she's ever given me went to the processor due to CAE exposure. It's tempting to keep Elsa and milk her through and induce her if I ever need to breed her again. Meh.
Elsa is an example of how teats are super easy to shrink on your does apparently. Her nice Lily, who should be leaving tomorrow has especially small teats (Lily's grand dam is to Elsa's right being milked with her mega teats).