BOTTLE
FEEDING
Our
first attempt at bottle feeding wasn't too bad and
could probably be termed a success. Granted we didn't
get too much milk into the babies, but they survived.
And I will concede bottle feeding for one day probably
wasn't a good test.
Our second and third
attempts ran simultaneously – for a couple days.
One Friday night at a goat auction in Elgin Crossroads,
AL, we purchased a little billy for $6. He was about
two or three weeks old (and was sold as a nanny).
We got him home, made him a home in a dog shipping
container, and fixed him a bottle using Purina calf
replacer. (It wasn't easy to figure out how much of
the powder to use to make an 8 oz. bottle of milk;
the bag seemed to want you to mix the milk by the
gallon!) He had apparently been raised as a bottle
baby because he took to the bottle with no problems
at all.
The next day we were
in Lewisburg, TN at a goat auction. A doe with a bad
teat and her baby sold, but the buyer didn't want
the baby so it was put back on the auction block.
And for $2 we had a cute little black-headed, 3/4
(unregistered) Boer doeling. We thought she was about
a week old. Hindsight being 20-20, we realized she
was probably only a day old when we bought her. We
named her Tess.
When we offered Tess
a bottle, initially she didn't know what to do with
it. But in no time at all she drained the entire thing.
Hmmmm, she was really hungry, so we gave her another
8 oz. bottle. A few hours later we went down to feed
the two babies. The little billy took his bottle and
ate a little goat chow, but the little nanny wasn't
too interested (although she did drink another 8 oz.)
By the next morning, little Tess had diarrhea. Our
first thought was the formula milk didn't agree with
her, so we went to Huntsville, AL to Publix and bought
some goat milk. We managed to keep her alive a week,
but each day she got weaker and weaker regardless
of how much milk we got into her.
The lessons we learned
with Tess: you can overfeed a baby goat. The mother
doesn't let the baby have all the milk it wants. After
a baby nurses for 10 to 15 seconds, the mother walks
off. More frequent feedings of less milk is preferred
(at least for our goats). Also, Tess probably had
not gotten enough, if any, colustrum from her mother.
Finally, we did not know to treat for entrotoxemia
using CD Antitoxin and pennicilian.
The billy, by the
way, grew well on the Purina calf replacer, took a
20 oz. bottle twice a day until he was three months
old, and sold for $68.
Feeling bad about
Tess but good about the billy, we were more confident
when we had a doe die the day following a bad kidding.
We had milked her
so knew Rex got colostrum. For 24 hours we fed him
colustrum with a syringe every two hours. When we
ran out of the colostrum, we put Rex on a milk formula
we found on a "goat list."
To make this formula
take a gallon of whole milk, pour off 4 cups, add
1 cup buttermilk and 1 large can evaporated milk,
then refill the jug with as much of the whole milk
as it will hold.
When Rex was 10 days
old, we had a partially-paralyzed doe whose doe kid
couldn't figure out how to nurse. (The buck kid did
just fine.) So Rex was joined in the laundry room
by Cottontop. Another doe had triplets and rejected
one, so Yoda joined Rex and Cottontop.
As with Rex, we started
the babies off with 2 oz. of formula every two hours.
This was gradually increased to 4 oz. every three
hours and finally 6 oz. every four hours by the time
they were a week old. By two weeks they were taking
an 8 oz. bottle four times a day. The three babies
were taken out in the yard for sunshine and play time
with the border collie puppy; they were all growing
just fine.
Since it was January
and we had no heat in the barn, we still had all the
babies living in dog kennels in the laundry room.
At one month of age, Rex was up to 16 oz. of milk
formula. One evening he took his bottle and was fine.
When we went in 6 hours later to given them their
next bottles, Rex was dead. An autopsy showed a healthy,
but dead, goat. Months later our vet said the whole
milk/buttermilk/evaporated milk formula may have been
just too rich for Rex.
By this time, Bertha
had kidded again and had more milk than her baby could
manage. (And she had what we termed a "balloon"
teat – it would get bigger and bigger until
the kid couldn't latch onto it.) Alma had also freshened
and had excess milk.
So, we milked Alma
and Bertha – and Yoda and Cottontop grew well.
At one month of age they moved to the barn. They gradually
worked up to 16 oz. of milk twice a day until they
were about 2 1/2 months old when we reduced the feedings
to once a day. By three months they were drinking
well out of the branch, so they were gradually weaned
from the bottles altogether.
We tried but could
never convince either Alma or Bertha they could easily
cut out the middlemen – us – and simply
allow Yoda and Cottontop to nurse along with their
own kids. Stubborn goats. Fortunately neither minded
being on the milk stand because that meant an extra
ration of feed.
With Cottontop and
Yoda we learned bottle babies tend to grow up to be
pests. They are extremely tame and people-friendly,
but every time they see you they expect you to feed
them. And when you don't feed them, they seem to assume
you simply don't see them, so they get as close to
you as they possibly can, normally causing you to
trip over them. Yoda and Cottontop were sweeties,
but they were sold when they were 8 months old.
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