Last Saturday, we put the does with the bucks. For those of you that are in tune with this simple statement, it means the breeding season has begun here at Sunny Acres Farm. A whole lot of thought goes into this process because next year's kid crop starts now. We have been thinking about this day for many months and now is when the plan goes into action. One buck that won't be getting a harem this year is Jasper. We are sadly phasing out of the Boers in favor of the Kikos. While it is true that the Boers often produce a nicer carcass for the butcher, they don't do as well as the Kikos under pasture management conditions. We are now a totally pasture based commercial meat goat operation. We need animals that will thrive under these conditions.
In 2002, we brought the first Boers to this farm. They had the first kids in the spring of '03. At that time I could buy bagged goat feed from Blue Seal for about $8 a bag. (These were 50 lb. bags) We were more than generous with the grain and the kids thrived and grew very well. As time went on and our herd increased, the price of grain was creeping up but we just kept feeding it and watched the kids grow very well. We even set up a creep feeder so they could have all they wanted without the mothers getting too fat. But, we only had about a dozen does and 25 kids a year and we could afford to buy all the feed we wanted on my salary. We never even calculated what it cost to produce a kid. That is not good business practice!
That was then, but this is now. I don't have a well paying off-farm job anymore. I was retired in January of '09 when my company needed to drastically reduce costs. I have a pension, but it does not cover grain for goats. We have expanded the doe herd a bit. Today we will put 32 does with the bucks and we have another 17 doelings that are being raised for the future. We cannot afford to feed these animals grain. It just is not in the equation. They have to manage on the grass that they can eat in the pasture. We have made an investment in improving that grass and that seems to be a better deal than buying grain. Today the bag of grain that cost $8 in 2003 costs over $14, and the price goes up at a steady rate. Economics dictates that we find a different path to produce goat meat that will allow us to earn a profit. Without a profit, there is really no point to going through the hard work of being a goat farmer.
This brings us back to the Boer-Kiko discussion. Without getting into all of the statistics, I can sum up our current year's kid crop, which we had on performance test. The kids at birth were very uniform with no real significant difference in weights or livability. At weaning we saw a slight advantage of the Kikos over the Boers and we attributed that to hybrid vigor, but it was most likely better resistance to the parasites that were an epidemic this year. It was after weaning that the spread really grew. The Kikos, for the most part gained at a better rate than the Boers. We were weighing all the kids and doing a Famacha check at least every other week. The Kikos had better Famacha scores and rates of gain than the Boers every time. The Boers were wormed much more frequently and were on intensive therapy to keep some of them alive when they were so wormy that they had a Famacha score of 5. The only kid that died this year was also a Boer that we were not able to save. Some of the Kikos have not been wormed except at weaning and have scores of 1-2. The kid herd was managed as a group, so they all got the same feed and opportunity to grow. The two photos below show the marked contrast between the Boer doeling in the front and the kiko/crossbred doelings behind. All were born within a couple of weeks of each other.
The group of doelings that is being kept for breeding next year is all Kikos. Their rate of gain, Famacha scores, and overall appearance is way better than any of the Boer doelings. The simple fact is that under our management system the Kikos are doing better. They will be our way forward. We are here to produce meat animals for a market that will not pay for inefficiencies in production. The prices are good for the animals we sell, but they would not support the feeding of grain to the herd to allow the Boers to stay and be a part of the make-up of the herd here at Sunny Acres. Reality is sometimes a very harsh fact of life.
One thing that isn't coming through in this blog is the research and long conversations that we had regarding the conscious choice to raise animals as "off grain" as possible- for the sake of the animal and the quality of the meat. Evidence of the chemical changes in an animal's digestive system as a result of grain-based diet vs. grass/browse-based diet being one of the top driving forces in that plan (E.Coli contamination in beef, for example...) So, as much as there is a financial gain for cutting out grain, you need to remind your readers (and perhaps yourself) of the fundamental philosophy that an animal "designed" to be a browser/grazer is best left being a browser/grazer... and maybe the problem isn't in your financial status, but in the way these animals have, over time, been carried far enough from their roots that they now demand an unnatural diet to maintain their condition. Keep up the good work.
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