Tuesday, July 23, 2024

The first day with goats

The two goats, mother and daughter, arrived around 3 P.M. Sunday.  I haven't called them by any names so far except "the goats".  My dear friend Joanna suggested Thelma and Louise, which I like, and may use for them if I can remember it all the time.  The mother has a registered name, but I don't think they bothered to call her by that, or any, name.  

Like all livestock, they ran the whole fence around their pen, continually crying, all afternoon.  They wanted their old home and all their buddies!

They had plenty of grass to eat, which would shut them up for a while.  I had no fear they'd get out of this pen, because Cliff and the grandson spent every resource making it safe.

I wanted to check them before it got dark and went out to make sure all was well.  Imagine my surprise when I found the daughter, Louise, outside the pen and crying pitifully to get back in with her mother, who was frantic.

Seriously, I could have cried.  Cliff and Arick had given everything they knew how to do so this wouldn't happen.  All that work, and now my worst fear was coming true.  I came inside and said, "Cliff, you are not going to believe this, but the baby goat is out."

But he DID believe it, of course.  He put on his shoes; we went out and walked the whole fence and found no place a goat could get over or under; Casper the friendly ghost couldn't have got out of there!  We got Louise back in, watched for awhile, and came back in the house.  We were a bit worried, though:  If Louise did get out and went to bah-bah-ing for her mother, it could easily draw coyotes who could easily kill that little goat.  About 15 minutes later I decided to go to bed, but first I went to check on the goats.  I'm sure by now you know.  Louise was out again.

Cliff came out and helped me to get the rowdy goat... she isn't exactly tame yet, though her mom is.  Since it was almost dark, he said we'd shut her up in the garage.  That worried me, because what would that little goat do in there?  I needn't have worried; we had a bale of hay in there, and she was asleep on it.  Nothing looked out of place.  Thank goodness these Nigerian Dwarf goats are too small to hop up on a car or truck!

The next morning Cliff said he thought he had figured things out.  Where the back of the pen goes to the fence between us and our neighbors, it ends not near a post, but in the middle of the fence.


He and Arick had mentioned it, and were going to fix the space between the pole and the fence; they had forgotten to do anything about it.  The space was no wider than three inches, but when the goat stuck her head in and pushed herself through, that forced the fence away more, and she had room to get out.  Cliff fixed it with a rusty baling wire and there have been no more runaways.


  

I didn't know I'd get an adventure to share so soon after the goats arrived, but there you go. 

14 comments:

  1. Anonymous11:03 AM

    Guessing the goat shepherd is still looking for openings and has replaced the rusted wire.

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  2. We used to raise pigs. They were easier to contain as far as holes go but were harder to gate. They could figure out nearly any gate latch mechanism with enough boredom which they had plenty. More than once I would look out the window and see a bunch of them contentedly checking out the grass on the other side of the fence. They never went very far.

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  3. Sounds like little louise is going to be entertaining! Read my post today, I also had an escape at my house!!

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  4. Is there a need to "sew" the gap the entire length of the gap between the fence and the post? Interesting how baby wants to get away from Mom. Good luck. Linda in Kansas

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    1. That's more or less what he did with the wire.

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  5. Anonymous2:09 PM

    Ha! The goat adventures have begun already! If there is any sort of egress at all, they will find it. They are clever. Rebecca in SW MO

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    1. I knew that, of course, from the other goats we've had. The next thing is to introduce them to electric fence.

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  6. Day 1: the adventure begins! I have to admit that I got quite a chuckle reading this. Can hardly wait to read Day 2. They are little stiinkers, i am telling you!

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  7. I didn't expect adventures either, not right away. Glad it's fixed and baby goat is now penned.

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  8. Oh Donna! I can just see you telling Cliff!! You need a deer cam out there to watch the little houdini's! 😂

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    1. No problems since that first night, because Cliff fixed it.

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  9. Goats! Wow. And an escapee on the first night. I hope you enjoy them.

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