The goat is called the
poor man’s cow. They are inexpensive, easy to handle, and eat a wide variety of
vegetation. They are basically browsers, meaning they eat leaves and stems from
shrubs and trees. They are the most efficient animal to convert browse to lean
meat. When commercial feeds become unavailable, they would be the most likely
survivors. They are also easily trained as pack and cart animals, able to pack
20 to 40% of their weight and pull five times that. They can negotiate more
difficult terrain than any other pack animal and continue with only the water
they get from vegetation for up to four days, if not making milk. They would be
the best animal to “bug-out” with to either the woods or range. They can make
good use of cut-over areas, growing deciduous trees, and weeds June through
September and grass pastures October and November and April and May. December
through March requires winter feeding on some combination of evergreen
blackberries, heather, dry grass supplemented with oil seed cake, hay, silage,
grain, roots, kale, twigs, bark, even discarded Christmas trees, and ivy. The
books say ivy is poisonous. However, my St. Croix sheep have kept my property
ivy-free without a problem. It may be they have to get used to it gradually. The
sheep were orphan lambs that incorporated ivy into their diet as they began
eating solids.
The milk breeds are
Alpines, La Mancha, Nubians, Saanens, Toggenburgs, and Oberhaslis. The Saanen
gives the most milk and the Nubian the richest milk. The Alpines and
Toggenburgs are the most persistent milkers, meaning they continue producing
milk the longest before dropping off and going dry. Usually people breed their
goats to kid every year, breeding them after seven months of production,
milking another two or three months, and then drying them off for two months
before kidding again. With the persistent goats, one can milk continually
without rebreeding for 13 to 36 months. This means more feed goes into milk
production and is less stressful for both the goat and owner. So these would be
good choices for a family milk goat.
For someone who wants
both milk and meat, Boers, Nubians, and Saanens are the best choices. They are
the largest goats. The Boer is actually a meat goat, breeds year round, and
commonly has twins and triplets. Therefore they give sufficient milk for a
number of kids. One can reduce the number of kids they are nursing to the
degree of milk needed by humans. The Saanen and Boer are also excellent work
goats. The Nubian seldom has the temperament for work.
Pigmy goats and Nigerian
Dwarf goats are small breeds that can give up to two quarts of milk per day.
Their small size classifies them as pets, making them legal to keep in some
cities. Three dwarfs can be kept in the space needed for one standard goat. If
one’s bug-out location is a rocky hilly area with lots of brush, the Spanish
goat would be the most efficient meat producer.
The best breeds to
“bug-out” with would be the triple-purpose goats– Saanens and Boers. However,
the Saanen, being a high milk producer, requires grain for that production. The
wethers (castrated goats), however, would be fine to take along as pack and
meat animals. That leaves the Boer as the most important breed to maintain when
SHTF.
In using goats to rustle
their own feed, consider the following rules of thumb. If a kid is fed an
abundance of milk and grain, the rumen does not develop to handle the coarse
feeds they need when rustling. The kid should be weaned off milk between 8 and
12 weeks and fed one pound of grain and protein concentrate a day, along with
roughage until nine months old. By then the rumen has developed enough for it
to continue developing on a roughage diet. If a goat has been fed in
confinement as an adult, it will not adjust to grazing. Also, if a doe has
always been dried off after 5 to 10 months of milking, she will persist in that
pattern. So to have a goat that adjusts to your system, you best start with
young ones. For the best tasting milk, you need to confine the doe off browse,
silage, and turnips four hours before milking. Milk every 12 hours or 6 or 7 AM
and 4 or 5 PM, but be consistent. You best confine her at night, then release
her after milking until four hours before the next milking, then out again
until dark.
In breeding the dairy
goats, it takes two to keep a family in dairy products year round. So to use
the system used for dairy cows, we would need six people with six does each,
supplying two other families and each keeping a buck, which will rotate between
herds each year. Goat milk is naturally homogenized, so it is harder to
separate out the cream to make butter. Goat’s milk is not as universally used,
so it may be harder to find the other 12 families to supply. This may be the
place to discuss the difficulty finding a community of breeders who all have or
agree to have the same breed. Our three lines could actually be three different
breeds. The breed conservationists would never approve, but consider that
during World War II some European breeds of livestock were lost or severely depleted.
So, we should consider with all our stock which breeds could logically be
combined if necessary.
With goats, I would put
all the dairy breeds, except the Nubians, in one class. The Nubian is
genetically different in some ways. Importantly, the polled (hornless) gene in
both Nubians and Angoras is not linked with the intersex gene, like it is in
the other dairy breeds. It is necessary to avoid breeding polled to polled in
those breeds. I think the other breeds could be crossed, but Nubians, Angoras,
Boers, and the dwarf breeds should be kept separate, though the dwarfs could be
crossed with each other. Some crosses with Angoras to make the Pygora breed and
with Pygmies on Nubians to make the Kindergoat have been done, and that is fine
if one wants to maintain these breeds. The small Kindergoat gives nearly as
much milk as the Nubian, and the kids efficiently convert feed to meat.
How it might work to
maintain three breeds of goats in a community might look like this:
A = Alpine
B = Toggenburg
C = Saanen
B = Toggenburg
C = Saanen
|
|
Year 1
|
|
Year 2
|
|
Year 3
|
|
Breeder
|
Does
|
Buck
|
Kids
|
Buck
|
Kids
|
Buck
|
Kids
|
1
|
A
|
A 1
|
A
|
C 2
|
AC Cross
|
B 1
|
AB Cross
|
2
|
A
|
B 1
|
AB Cross
|
A 2
|
A
|
C 2
|
AC
|
3
|
B
|
C 1
|
BC Cross
|
B 1
|
B
|
A 1
|
BA Cross
|
4
|
B
|
A 2
|
BA Cross
|
C 1
|
BC Cross
|
B 2
|
B
|
5
|
C
|
B 2
|
CB Cross
|
A 1
|
CA Cross
|
C 1
|
C
|
6
|
C
|
C 2
|
C
|
B 2
|
CB Cross
|
A 2
|
CA Cross
|
|
|
Year 4
|
|
Year 5
|
|
Year 6
|
|
1
|
A & crosses
|
2’s Alpine
|
A
|
5’s C
|
AC Cross
|
4’s B
|
AB Cross
|
2
|
A & Crosses
|
4’s B
|
AB Crosses
|
1’s A
|
A
|
5’s C
|
AC Cross
|
3
|
B & crosses
|
6’s C
|
BC Crosses
|
4’s B
|
B
|
2’s A
|
BA Crosses
|
4
|
B & crosses
|
1’s A
|
BA Crosses
|
6’s C
|
BC Crosses
|
3’s B
|
B
|
5
|
C & crosses
|
3’s B
|
CB Crosses
|
2’s A
|
CA Crosses
|
6’s C
|
C
|
6
|
C & crosses
|
5’s C
|
C
|
3’s B
|
CB Crosses
|
1’s A
|
CA Crosses
|
The average dairy cow or
doe reproduces herself by five years of age but can easily keep reproducing for
10 years. So some purebreds will be maintained for some time. One person could
manage Boers, Spanish goats, or the dwarfs for meat production part time, using
the system of 30 does and three bucks used sequentially. Alternatively, one
could maintain any breed pure, for a time, using 10 does and two bucks,
breeding sons of one buck to the daughters of the other buck. Extend the
generation interval by using them as long as able and keeping new parents from
later breedings. Even with a 4-year generation interval, one could go 8 to 12
years before needing new blood.
Sheep are no more
efficient in crude protein production per hectare than cattle, and they are subject
to predation, disease, and parasites. They require more labor than cattle but
considerably less grazing land per animal (1/4 acre/ewe-lamb pair). However,
like cattle, they make efficient use of land too arid or too steep for
cultivation (over 15-20% slope and 8-16 inches of annual precipitation). Sheep
fit best in areas of medium to low rainfall, grazing steeper areas than cattle,
short grass ranges preferably with lots of forbs (herbaceous plants like clover
and dandelion).
Sheep are the most important
wool producers. The six top dual purpose wool-meat sheep breeds begin with the
Rambouillet. Only the Merino has finer grading wool, but the Rambouillet is
more productive with respect to lamb meat. They are the breed of choice for
extensive grazing and wool for light-weight comfortable clothing. The Targhee
comes next for high quality apparel type wool, and it adapts to both farm and
range conditions and even has some parasite resistance. Next are the Columbia
and Corriedale crossbred-wool breeds. They are excellent range sheep with wool
valued by hand spinners for making blankets. They have meatier lambs than the
fine-wool sheep. The Long-wool breeds to consider are the Border Leicester and
the Romney. The longer, coarser wool is most easily spun into yarn and used for
making thick sweaters and rugs. These breeds do not have the same flocking
instinct as the range breeds and do better on good pastures. The Leicester is
valued for crossing on Rambouillets to produce a meatier lamb. The Romney is
valued by hand spinners for hardiness in the wetter Pacific Northwest climate.
For strictly meat
production, the blackface medium-wool breeds are most popular. These are the
Suffolk and the Hampshire for large meaty lambs. They are kept on diversified
farms where the feed and pasture are good quality, which is especially
necessary for the Hampshire. Their wool has little value, but it still needs to
be clipped every year. The Southdown is a smaller medium-wool sheep adapted to
hillier pastures. If one wants primarily meat but would like some wool for
spinning, the Southdown wool is similar to cashmere and easy to blend with
other fibers. This breed does not eat shrubs and trees, so is used to weed
orchards and vineyards.
If one wants lamb meat
without the bother of shearing, three hair sheep breeds meet the requirement.
The Dorper is the best meat breed, producing very meaty twin lambs with the
highest value skins of any breed. They are good foragers in hot, dry climates.
The St. Croix, also known for twinning, utilizes coarse feeds and has the most
parasite resistance of any breed. They do eat trees and vines. The Katahdin
also produces twins, utilizes a high forage diet and has good parasite
resistance. All these hair sheep breed year round and if necessary could be
combined. The Barbados is a hair sheep I do not recommend, due to wildness,
making management more difficult. The same breeding program recommended for
meat goats apply to sheep.
Dry lands, defined as a
growing period less than 120 days encompasses 41% of the earth’s land mass and
much of the Western U.S. Here, range animals provide an efficient subsistence
base in areas otherwise unproductive for humans. Highest yields often occur
where cattle, sheep, and goats all share the range. Cattle eat grass, sheep eat
forbs, and goats browse. If one’s survival retreat consists of acres of range
land with a water source, pastoralism could become the survival strategy. Seven
adults with as many children could handle 30 horned Hereford cows and three
bulls, eight Nubian does and two bucks, 30 Rambouillet or Crossbred-wool ewes
and three rams, and use nine riding mares and one stallion for transportation.
I would select Morgans of Western working lines. Successful pastoralists hold a
wealth of ecological knowledge passed down through generations of experience.
Since, in the U.S., pastoralism, other than under fence, is a dying way of
life, the learning curve will be very steep for newcomers.
I am convinced that what
will survive when SHTF are small communities pulling together. Your family’s
stockpile of food, water, bullets, and band aids will last only so long. Over
the long haul, communities producing their own necessities from farms and
ranges will rebuild civilization.
From the Survival Blog
No comments:
Post a Comment