Posts Tagged ‘management’

Rheema Departs Again

Friday, April 10th, 2009

Over the following months, I gradually got the 2 strangers more and more used to me.  I’d had the males taken care of, and as the weather tuned into winter, I began letting the does down to the shed on bad nights. At first, the 2 strangers wouldn’t come in there with me, so I’d open the gates and leave them to follow the others after I’d gone.

One big question loomed in my mind – how was I ever going to drench these 2 mad mavericks?  Tamer they might be – but still not tame enough to grab their faces and push a syringe into their mouths, thats for sure! Well believe it or not, it did happen eventually – just by taking things in stages.

Once I get them a bit more used to being around the big shed with me there, I began opening the pen doors and putting feed out in the troughs on the back wall.  Before long they got used to me splitting them between 2 small pens and once they were feeding in the troughs there, I could shut the pen doors and get up close as they ate.

One day after a spell of familiarization with that, I decided the time had come, so I laid out my drench and syringe and without too much of a drama I managed to drench every one of them while they were eating their food.  And that’s a process I can now repeat when I need to.  It’s amazing what food, patience and the time to acclimatize will do in managing stock.

Then Rheema disappeared again.  I found the gap under fence into the shed paddock where she’d got through – a gap, incidentally, made by the pigs, opportunistic lot.

How she managed to get right off the property altogether, I still don’t know, and I’m only grateful that her kids didn’t go with her.  Like Moz, she was a Houdini.  She had become so used to living on the outside, and the living is so good, that she just waited her chance and took it.  I knew that with no bucks left on my place, she was unlikely to come home again.  Fortunately, there are none up there either, now, so I don’t have to worry about goats reproducing themselves in the bush.

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Separating the Sexes

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

I still had Moz and the Rookie Buckling to deal with, and little as I wanted to do it, I knew it was essential to remove them before winter if we were going to have some peace and a manageable herd. Mating and kidding were not on my agenda for the coming year.

Everyone was running together in the far paddock over the back, and I had absolutely no idea how I was going to achieve the first step of splitting the females off from the males, without having to bring them all down to the shed, yard them – and then what?  Moz is a handful at close quarters and the wild Rookie buckling – well, getting him into a yard to start with would be a mission, let alone anything else.  The one thing I definitely did NOT want was to have a mishap and lose either of those boys back into the bush.

Without any great plan in mind, I decided one afternoon to slip up there quickly and see how things were.  The paddock is probably my largest, the main gate is at the top end, and about a third of the way down it drops off quite steeply to the road, so you can’t see the whole paddock from the top. There was still quite a high growth of feed on the ground, too.

I went through the gate and over to my right I could just see the backs of a couple of does about 50 yards away with their heads down, grazing near the brow of the hill.  I called out quietly.  They heard me and came – and what’s more the 4 kids and the 2 new youngsters appeared over the edge of the hill, following them.  Glory Be!  There were no bucks in sight!  That in itself was a miracle, because those guys usually stick close to their women.

I got the females through the gate and realised I was missing Dawn.  Hmmm.  Pushing my luck a second time, I went back into the paddock.

Some instinct led me to the left this time, towards the bush boundary, and as I moved down the hill I saw her further down near the fence.  I couldn’t believe it : she was on her own and still no boys in sight!  She looked up and – always ready to come, bless her – she started up the paddock towards me.

I held my breath, watching out of the corner of my eye for the males to put in an appearance, but miraculously they didn’t.  So we sneaked up the hill together and a few minutes later, as she followed me through the gate to join the others, I sent up a heartfelt prayer of thanks.

Against all the odds, I’d accomplished an almost impossible task alone, with an absolute minimum of effort.  That was a miracle!

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The Strangers – 1

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

At the time I got Sunshine, I picked up a couple of weaner kids with a similar tan coat coloring to hers.

They were bigger than I expected, and when we came to load them up, they were anything but tame.  “You will have to tether them for awhile till they settle.” was the farmer’s advice.  Hmmmm. I hate tethering goats, but he was right.  Flighty animals are nothing but trouble.  They’re hard to handle, and their kids are going to turn out the same, and their kids also.  The learning process just has to take place.

We put their bodies into sacks and tied them up round the neck, and they sat in the back of the Ute looking disgruntled.

On my way home I called on my neighbour who is truly wonderful.  He took one look and when I asked for his help in getting them set up, he agreed immediately.  He found a brand new, strong dog-collar and a long dog chain for one, and I knew I too had a brand new dog-collar and a very strong chain I had had made up for Ben and never used.

I had decided to put them in the house garden, where the grass had regrown a bit after Natasha. I could also keep a very good eye on them there.  So we drove over home and I took the Ute up to the shed and backed it up to the top gate of the garden.  We selected two new, strong metal fencing standards from the shed (this was before I started using them all up to mend fences), drove them in and tackled our first goat.

She was half way out of her bag and looking ready to take on anything, so I hopped in the back of the Ute and managed to move her to where we could both get hold of her.  We got her collar on, carried her down and fastened her to her standard.  The second kid was a little easier to handle, and soon they were taking stock of their new home.

At first they spooked at every move, rushing to the full length of their chains and flipping onto the ground.  I didn’t even show my face for 24 hours.  After that I quietly came and went through the garden as per normal, so they could see plenty of me.  And I threw them feed, which at first they ignored, never having eaten anything but grass. I began to feel a bit happier when at last I peeped out of the window and saw both of them sitting chewing the cud – that’s always a good sign.

Dawn and Mozilla were in the paddock immediately above them and they soon realised they were in good company.  Moz was just starting to come into season for the year so no doubt they thought he smelt rather nice.  I certainly do – I have to admit I always enjoy the smell of bucks when they first come on heat. It’s later in the season that the smell gets strong enough to knock an army over.

Dawn, Mozilla and Rheema

Dawn, Mozilla and Rheema

To help things along, I fed Dawn and Moz there daily in a big feeding trough I moved into the paddock – just a bit of feed to get them used to me being around them again.  I was sure the new goats were getting used to seeing me with the others, too.  I knew it would be awhile though before they realised that what I put out was edible: I’d had that problem before.

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Upgrading and Maintenance

Friday, March 27th, 2009

While all this was going on, I was also dealing with the fencing around my shed and on the road frontage, which I hadn’t been able to give much attention to for years. If I was going to start using my facilities again, the place needed to be as watertight as possible all round.

Most of my road frontage near the shed is a steep bank covered in shrubs that drops down to the highway. The fence is an old sheep netting fence put in by my father, with 2 rows of barbed wire on the top – but it is deteriorating a bit in places.  I was pretty sure the goats got out there on occasions and whenever they did, it was only a matter of them taking a leisurely walk of less than half an hour round my boundary to be back in the bush again.

The first thing to be fixed was the mysteriously rotted-off tie-down post on the shed side of the lower paddock.  I drove a waratah down beside that, hooking the top of the post under the top lip of the standard, and wiring the fence and post to it in several places.  It pulled the wires back down nicely, and felt good and secure.  I reminded myself to add a second waratah when I had one to spare.

The Big Shed

The Big Shed

Next came the internal fences around my shed, some of which had never been fully completed. One length of fence needed a capping rail and some repair work on the netting.  I didn’t have any proper capping rail, but I had some long lengths of 1″x1″ which I’d bought for another project and never used, so I put them up to serve in the meantime and tidied up the netting on that fence.  There was one part of it where the goats had been able to jump over for years – that was not going to happen any more either.

When I got round to the road fence I found a nice big hole I didn’t know about – aaaah!  That explained a lot.  No wonder Moz seemed to appear and disappear like a ghost sometimes.

Hadn’t I mended that one before? If so, the hole was as large as life and needed to be fixed again. I can remember one time a couple of years ago getting that very eerie feeling of being watched while I was doing something in the kitchen garden.  I had looked up to find Moz standing there outside the fence, still and silent under the bushes, looking at me from beneath those curls.

Mozilla

Mozilla

And that explained why I’d noticed Rheema, several times since she came home, standing looking across in that direction from the paddock they were in.  When I saw her doing that, I had a feeling she might be thinking about an escape route, and sure enough – there it was.

It was not till the afternoon that I figured the outcome of the buck fight.  I heard some calls coming from the top paddock and could see The Pretender up near the bushline.  Was he the sole survivor, I wondered?  Was Moz lying exhausted somewhere?  Or worse?  I had walked up and down that hill so many times in recent days that I didn’t feel like going up again to investigate – and I had work to get on with.  Late in the afternoon, it all became clear.

Moz had given his son a trouncing, and The Pretender was now on the outer, while Moz retained posession of lower portion of the paddock and the fenceline boundary between the two of them and the does.  Though Mozilla’s days were numbered too, I was glad he had retained his sovereignty and that his guts and fighting skill had kept him on top. So far at least – would this be the final outcome, or would there be a war of attrition?

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