No, not that Nellie! I'm talking about a different Nellie. Nellie our new dairy goat. Tricia had been reading about dairy goats and thinking about getting one. Lo and behold she made a few telephone calls and found one for sale. We made the trip to a nearby town and met with the owners, looked at their goats and asked a lot of questions.
We decided to go ahead and purchase Nellie and we brought her home earlier this week. She's a Nubian dairy goat. These goats have very high butterfat content in the milk. Goat milk is easily digestible, has low lactose, is virtually allergen free, and is delicious. An interesting thing about goat milk is that it is naturally homogenized, meaning that, unlike cow's milk, the cream in goat's milk doesn't rise to the top but remains suspended.
Nellie, our new Nubian dairy goat |
If you look closely, you can tell that she has a little white beard. She's very curious and has quite a personality. The cows welcomed her to the pasture after a while and she's settling in as part of the family now.
I have a few weeks prior to Nellie having her kid, but I've got to look for some plans for building a milking table for her and start on that project.
Nellie is proud to be an American |
Goats are browsers which means they like to eat high up on shoots and leaves from shrubs and trees. In fact, I frequently see her climbing up the fence and nibbling on oak leaves or craning her neck and eating the lilies along the neighbor's fence row.
When the kids were younger, they showed meat goats, but this is our first experience with a dairy goat. We'll be on a little learning curve for a while and will keep you posted as Nellie kids and we start milking.
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