Doelings? Bucklings? Wethers? Bucklings which are soon to be wethers? Dairy breed? Meat breed? What are you planning to do with them...milk?...pet?...freezer?...show?...breeding?
Depending on all that, with what all I've been through lately, I might not worry to much about introducing grain at all... From here on out, grain is something I'll only use when it's necessary -- not just to be nice or make the goats happy or because everybody else feeds grain..
(...I'm feeling very bitter about grain right now, btw...it's not you...it's me...I got sloppy with with grain and my mistake may yet have signed a death warrant for one of my bottle babies...)
Sorry to hear about your bottle babies. I have one female that is 3 weeks and the other is 1 week. They are both dwarf nigerians. They are pets and get lots of attention each day. I do have a little buck who is about 12 weeks old that in a year or so I will breed them. Again sorry about your loss.
Thanks. Last evening we let the little ones run with our adult does and I noticed the 3 week old was eating some grain, and that is what got me to thinking about it. Yes we stayed with them the whole time and it was only for about an hour. So no worries there.
my bottle babies get free choice hay, grain and water from day 1. they usually start eating around 7 - 8 days. My dam raised kids will eat as early as 4 days.
for those I am going to keep, I let them wean themselves, they usually wean themselves at about 4 months, give or take a couple of weeks. they just don't finish the 2 a day bottles, then one day they take a couple of swallows and they are done. When and how much grain and hay depends on wether you give goats milk or milk replacer. The babies start nibbling at about a week, then on from there. they don't actually eat, but just play and nibble, but I use goats milk in their bottles.
I always used whole cows milk when I bottle fed, and some I had to actually show what they were supposed to do with the gain and hay ... like, pretend to eat it myself before they'd have anything to do with it. They'd catch on, but not nearly as quickly as dam raised kids. The things we won't do for our goats.