Goat Kid Care

Reader Contribution by Shelby Devore and Farminence
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I recently bought three young goat kids that had been rejected by their mothers. Two of them were twin boys that were about 3 days old, the other was a doe kid that was about a week old. The three of them were absolutely adorable and little did I know, required frequent care. Not that I minded, they’re too cute to not spend time with!

Feeding Goat Kids

Goat kids that are on the bottle (or nursing from mom) will start trying to nibble on feed pretty early. It’s ok for them to try some if they want to. Their new ruminant stomachs require time to build up the bacteria that they need to digest their food once they are older. This is probably why goat kids start experimenting with feed from an early age.

If you’ve got goat kids that you are bottle feeding, then you’ll need a bottle and a lamb/kid nipple attachment. You can purchase these at feed stores (I found all of my goat kid needs easily at my local Tractor Supply Company store.) or order them online. If they aren’t nursing from mom, then they will need goat kid milk replacer and possibly colostrum. If they didn’t nurse from mom at all, they definitely need colostrum. Colostrum is the first milk that the mother produces. It’s loaded with antibodies and probiotics that get the kid’s immune system and digestive system up and going. Both replacer and colostrum can be found in feed stores.

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