What’s black, white, and a little obnoxious? Our miniature Nubian dariy goat, Ober D’ Rainbow PD Wroxy. Even though Wroxy is a little vocal at times, she has been a great addition to our herd. Showing, breeding, and just owning her has been a great experience.
Two years ago at the Clackamas County fair, one of the 4-H members in our club was selling off all of her goats, and one of them just happened to be Wroxy. She was a yearling at the time and of all things had been raised by a Pygmy goat mother. The decision to add to our herd was rather sudden but it all worked out. Since Goat Princess was set on breeding and raising minis, and Wroxy’s owner was heartbroken because she had to sell all of her goats, Goat Princess insisted on the purchase of Wroxy. She agreed to pay for her herself, and we took her home a few days after fair ended. It took quite awhile for her to be accepted by our other does, but she soon found comfort from our Alpine doe Windy, and they became fast friends.
That fall, we bred her to a Nigerian dwarf dairy goat named Ben, and on March 30th and 31st, she had three kids. Around 11:55 pm on March 30th, she kidded a buckling named Romeo. At about 12:05 am on the 31st of March, she kidding a doeling named Juliet. About ten minutes later, she had yet another, but stillborn, buckling. Wroxy has been a great mother and developed a nice udder. At the 2008 county fair, she and her doeling, Juliet, were taken to fair along with all of our other goats. Wroxy took first in her class and Juliet took second place in hers.
After fair we bred her again to Ben, and on April Fool's Day this year, she gave birth to two doelings, Renesmee and Bella. She once again is proving to be a great mother with a very nice udder.
As you can see, Wroxy has become a valuable member of our herd. She has turned out to be a good breeding doe and an attentive mother, two things you need to be thankful for. Our herd wouldn’t be the same without her.
About Me
Monday, April 9, 2007
Friday, March 30, 2007
HM Kari - Miniature Toggenburg Dairy Goat Doe
Kari is quite a miniature Toggenburg dairy goat. Besides being an excellent mother, she is a two-time Overall Grand Champion Miniature Dairy goat for the miniature class of dairy goats at the Clackamas County fair. She tracks great coloring of the Toggenburg line in that she is mocha brown with white points and a striped face. Although she is 50% Nigerian Dwarf dairy goat, she did not pick up much in the way of Nigerian coat patterns.
Here's a bit of her history. In 2005 we were introduced to her as a week old kid by our friends at a youth goat show. My middle daughter was able to bottle feed her and instantly fell in love with her as she would fall asleep on her lap after feeding. Once my husband found the doeling was for sale, he gave permission for Goat Princess to purchase her. She would be the first goat kid we had the opportunity to raise. Goat Princess wanted to make sure she had company, so she set up a bed next to the dog crate she was staying in and spent the night beside her.
Depending on how you look at it, that was good and bad. Kari immediately became bonded to her human 'mom'. After the first night though, we knew she needed to be treated somewhat like a goat. We set up an empty stock tank in the garage as a temporary home for her until we could relocate our horned pygmy wether. Kari would follow Goat Princess around the house and outside. She would wait by the door and bleat when it was potty time.
About the age of three weeks old, we were able to move her outside along with an Oberhasli doeling, Vega, that Camo Queen had purchased. Vega came along with her mom Savannah on a temporary basis so that Vega would have her own milk and Kari could be bottle fed from milking Savannah. As Vega had her mom, Kari turned to our pygmy doe for comfort, eventually using her as a spring board for her playful antics.
Kari's successful show career began that year at the Clackamas County Fair where she placed in the top five goats for the first two years. After being bred and successfully delivering triplets (2 bucks, 1 doe), her udder proved so wonderful that she placed as Overall Grand Champion Miniature dairy goat doe much to Goat Princess' delight.
The following fall she was once again bred to Medallion, the same Nigerian buck she was originally bred to, and produced quads (2 bucks, 2 does) in 2008. Proving herself again, she raised all four on her udder with no supplementation at all, even regulating those little kids so that they each received their fair share of milk. She returned to County Fair again to reclaim her title leaving Goat Princess pretty impressed with her favorite dairy goat.
Here's a bit of her history. In 2005 we were introduced to her as a week old kid by our friends at a youth goat show. My middle daughter was able to bottle feed her and instantly fell in love with her as she would fall asleep on her lap after feeding. Once my husband found the doeling was for sale, he gave permission for Goat Princess to purchase her. She would be the first goat kid we had the opportunity to raise. Goat Princess wanted to make sure she had company, so she set up a bed next to the dog crate she was staying in and spent the night beside her.
Kari as a newly disbudded bottle-baby doeling
About the age of three weeks old, we were able to move her outside along with an Oberhasli doeling, Vega, that Camo Queen had purchased. Vega came along with her mom Savannah on a temporary basis so that Vega would have her own milk and Kari could be bottle fed from milking Savannah. As Vega had her mom, Kari turned to our pygmy doe for comfort, eventually using her as a spring board for her playful antics.
Kari in her favorite napping spot.
Kari and her first set of triplet kids.
Stall card photo for 2007.
Grand Champion miniature dairy goat doe 2007.
Ribbon disply from Clackamas County Fair.
The following fall she was once again bred to Medallion, the same Nigerian buck she was originally bred to, and produced quads (2 bucks, 2 does) in 2008. Proving herself again, she raised all four on her udder with no supplementation at all, even regulating those little kids so that they each received their fair share of milk. She returned to County Fair again to reclaim her title leaving Goat Princess pretty impressed with her favorite dairy goat.
Kari at County Fair 2008.
Kari at County Fair 2008.
The following year Kari was bred to a different Nigerian buck, one with a little more color, and kidded with triplets (2 bucks, 1 doe) in 2009. Another trip to the county fair that summer, and she came home with Reserve Champion Miniature dairy goat doe, only to lose her title to our other doe PDF Wroxy (in fairness to Kari, it was our fault for allowing her udder to overfill its capacity which resulted in a stilted gait so that the judge was not able effectively judge her way of going).
That fall Kari was bred to our own Nigerian buck, Geronimo, kidding yet another set of triplets in 2010 -- Grenadine, Chartreuce, and Carol -- three pretty precious doelings in our opinion.
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