It’s dairy goat show season! No sooner were the cucumbers planted, than our trowels were traded for clippers, and we found ourselves driving around Northern California to the first two goat shows of the season.
The only thing I think we were missing on the farm truck last time we packed it up for a show was a sign that says “Lotus and Minnie – World Tour“. I swear, there are days that I feel more like a roadie, than a farmer. Thankfully, to date, nobody has requested an autograph from the girls though. Besides, that would just go to Minnie’s head.
Even for just two goats, show season does involve a lot of preparing the goats for show, organizing the house for surrogate farm-sitters, farm sitter training, packing and unpacking of trucks, pitching tents, grooming goats, and packing up gear again.
With shows each of the last two weekends, this fortnight, quite honestly, has been a blur.
The first show of the season was the North Valley Dairy Goat Association (NVDGA) show, at the Tehama County Fairgrounds, which is a four ring show, with four different judges. We took the girls to this same show last year, where both Lotus and Minnie each earned a first place position in the ring.
This show was very well attended this season, and there was a lot of very strong competition in the ring. I honestly don’t envy the judges, with so many beautiful does in the ring, and so many things to evaluate for each goat, it can’t be easy. Lotus got off to a slow start at NVDGA this year.
There can be some differences in how one judge will place a goat in the ring, compared to another judge, but this year all the judges seemed to be in general agreement as far as Lotus was concerned.
Lotus is a powerful looking doe for her size, and is always commended for her body capacity, and this year her udder capacity and “will to milk“, all characteristics that in my mind should be highly valued in any sturdy dairy animal. However, for the purposes of placing in the show ring, the judges typically seem to favor a more graceful and refined, feminine-looking doe, over one with Lotus’ general, stronger, appearance. We saw that this last year as well. Some judges loved her appearance, others didn’t give her a second look.
However, Lotus does have tremendous will to milk, and udder capacity for a doe her age. At peak lactation she was producing 4.8 pounds of milk a day. For a first freshener, you simply can’t knock that sort of performance in the milk pail! We’ll see how Lotus does during the rest of the show season this year, but I expect where she may fall short on the pageantry front this season, she’ll excel in the milk barn during her Dairy Herd Improvement (DHI) evaluation next year, where milk yield, milk composition, and quality, are all evaluated. I’m very excited to see those evaluations next year, as I’m already impressed with the yields we’re getting when making cheese. Our last batch of feta produced 2.5 pounds of cheese from a single gallon of milk!
The conformation feedback from the judges in the show ring though is helpful, especially for breeding, and selecting bucks to breed her to.
Clearly we don’t want to breed Lotus to a too powerful looking buck. I’m already curious to see how her daughter, Mariposa Lily, will mature this year, and how Lily herself will look once she’s in milk.
Minnie also got off to a slow start at NVDGA. Before she entered her first ring she seemed completely overwhelmed with all the activity around her. Goats and people everywhere, children running right past her, or riding their bikes within inches of her and startling her. She was NOT happy!
To take the edge off, just before the first show ring, I took Minnie for a jog around one of the remote parking lots in an effort to help her burn off some excess nervous energy. That’s the problem with the farm here, it’s so quiet, that events like this probably seem like pure chaos to the goats.
The first judge that Minnie saw didn’t like her at all. I expected that she might have some trouble placing well this season as we’ve been struggling to keep weight off of Minnie this spring, and she honestly doesn’t look her best at the moment. Maintaining a dry yearling, and a lactating doe in the same barn, is a lot of extra work if you don’t want your yearling to get fat on all the lush alfalfa hay that’s around for the milking doe.
All season I’ve been juggling hand-graining Lotus, so Minnie can’t eat the grain. At night I’ve been keeping them separated so Lotus has free access to alfalfa hay, while Minnie is offered only orchard grass, but Minnie has had some access to alfalfa during the day…and she’s quite the chow hound! Once our herd grows more it will be easier to separate, and feed does, by milking status, but right now if I separated them both full time, the whole neighborhood would hear about it!
Minnie’s performance improved when she entered the second ring though. It felt like we were walking around the ring forever while the judge carefully evaluated each goat in ring 2. Finally the judge pointed to Minnie, and directed her to the head of the line up. Different judges have different methods in the ring, so at first I wondered if there was any significance to Minnie being pulled out first. Sometimes judges will just pull out some goats early in their evaluation so they can compare them side by side.
After the initial sorting though, the judge made a couple of changes to her line up, leaving Minnie standing at the head of the line. Despite a few extra calories this spring, Minnie still managed to win first place! Minnie was commended for her length of body, which has always been one of her key attributes, her long neck, and her graceful, refined appearance, and levelness, both while standing, and on the move. Minnie’s first place win in her class then gave her the opportunity to compete with the other first place does from the other age classes in the grand champion round for that judge.
Fortunately, by this time, Minnie was starting to settle down, and more willing to walk calmly around the ring during the final evaluation. The goats are lined up in age order during the grand champion round, so nobody really knows what the judge is thinking until the winner is announced. Needless to say we were thrilled when Minnie was selected as junior Grand Champion!
Dairy goats can only win one junior (dry doe) Grand Championship. To become a permanent Grand Champion she will need a total of three championship wins. One leg can be earned as a junior doe/dry yearling, like Minnie, but the other two wins must be earned as a doe in milk, so Minnie’s win at NVDGA now means that Minnie is retired from the show ring this year, and can just put her hooves up for the remainder of the season.
Lotus has more shows though, and we’re hoping to show her daughter too later this season, but this last weekend we attended the Redwood Empire Dairy Goat Association (REDGA) show.
With the stress of travel, and the hot weather at the first show, Lotus was a little off her game the week prior to the REDGA show. Her milk production dropped 25% by the time we returned from NVDGA, her appetite was off, and I really questioned taking her to the REDGA show. She was healthy, she just didn’t seem happy. By the end of the week though her production was coming back up, and unlike the first show, REDGA at least was closer to the farm, and closer to the coast, so the weather wouldn’t be as hot at least. Yes, these goats did originate in West Africa, but these two spoiled goats are very much acclimated to coastal California!
Driving up to REDGA from the farm, we decided that driving directly through San Francisco was probably our best option. As it was Memorial Day Weekend, Bay Area traffic would be bad everywhere, so why not go through the city. This meant that the girls had their very first trip through San Francisco, by Golden Gate Park, and across the Golden Gate Bridge!
When we got to the north side of the bridge, we stopped for a few minutes at the vista point as it was a beautifully clear afternoon, and the bridge wasn’t obscured by fog. As popular as the bridge was with the tourists, Lotus and Minnie seemed to be very popular too! It’s probably not every day that a truck pulls up in that parking lot with dwarf dairy goats in the back!
Holiday weekend traffic was quickly getting worse though, so we made our stop brief, and headed on to the show.
Lotus didn’t udder up very well the first day at REDGA, and placed a little lower than we’d hoped with the first two judges. She seemed to settle in well that evening though. Her appetite picked up, and by evening milking she seemed much more relaxed. The second day her udder looked a little better, and she subsequently placed better in the lineup with both judges that day. One of the judges was a judge who had seen Lotus last year, before she was in milk, so I was especially interested to hear what that judge had to say about Lotus this year. The judge explained that Lotus’ placement (4th) in that class was because her udder was “overly capacious for a first freshener“, even though she commended her capacity overall.
At shows the last two weeks we’ve heard a number of whispers behind us, including “wow, look at the udder on that dwarf goat“, and some people have come up and simply told us directly that Lotus has an impressive udder for a first freshener, or they ask her age, and you see their jaw drop when we say she’s a “yearling milker“. Of course, Lotus did have the advantage of having had triplets this spring, and the number of kids born directly influences milk production.
At least this year, her udder even after 5 or 6 hours in milk exceeds that of some does that have been in milk for twelve hours or more, so by the time Lotus is in milk that long, she really stands out. Although her capacity, from a milk-yield perspective, is a good thing in the milk house, it’s likely that some of the judges are considering her capacity as a negative factor in the ring as a first freshener. There may be concerns about how well her udder may hold up over time, especially as milk yield tends to increase over the first few lactations, and that’s a valid consideration. Of course, only time will tell us over her subsequent freshenings, but her dam was also an excellent producer as a first freshener, and her sire’s dam handily placed in top ten during a one day milk test, so Lotus does have some very solid production genetics behind her. Next year though, if she only had a single kid, she could look completely different.
We’ll be interested to see how Lotus places through the remainder of this show season though, with other judges, and I’m already excited to see how she’ll look as a second freshener next year! In the meantime her kids from this spring are growing like weeds, but more about them in the next post.
How exciting a champion and why wouldn’t she be…and that feta must be amazing!
The feta was great! We were very excited that Minnie did so well, we just have to hope it doesn’t go to her head 😉
I’ve got the same issue with dry does and does in milk. Three are in milk and two are not. The two that are not HATE each other (well one hates everyone) so I can’t keep them together in a separate pen. I end up doing what you do and separate at night and feed grass hay. Unfortunately our yearling doe isn’t weaned yet so she’s getting extra calories that way.
I don’t know if you’ve done it already, but I’d love to see a post on what you are feeding your girls (I’m really getting into goat nutrition).
Sorry I missed you at Santa Rosa. Our schedule got all screwed up this weekend and I wasn’t able to make it.
Over the course of this year I’ve definitely decided that the greatest challenge of a small herd is the inability to group goats by age, pregnant/not pregnant, lactating/not lactating status. As their caloric requirements are enormously different between each stage it makes feeding something of a nightmare when you can’t separate your does. You have the same issues we do…small herd size, and overall space.
Supporting Lotus for milk production after kidding out triplets, with as much milk as she’s producing, has been our priority, and even then we’re falling short on keeping up with her metabolic demand. She did gain some weight after kidding, but I’m now struggling to maintain her where she is, in part because I’m trying not to turn Minnie into a chunky monkey…not just for her waistline, but fat dry yearlings tend to compromise their overall milk production down the road. I can’t make up all the difference with just grain, without the risk of acidosis though, so I have to feed alfalfa, I’m just not free-feeding it until the evening when they’re separated. Minnie of course is convinced I’m being mean, and torturing her, and doesn’t understand why Lotus gets all the ‘good stuff’ 😉
I do have plans to do a goat nutrition post, including how to read and understand the NRC’s “Nutrient Requirements of Small Ruminants”. Once you get the hang of reading that book, and working with the calculations (I have a spreadsheet set up with tables for the feeds we use to make it easy), it’s actually quite easy to determine their nutrient needs, and then play around with the components of their diet to ensure you’re meeting their requirements. It just takes a little practice to get the hang of formulating diets, but I think it’s fun! The biggest challenge this year though, at least for us, is finding good quality hay. Our alfalfa already looks more like August hay, not late May!
It’s a third year in a row of bad hay. Between too much late rain and not enough we just can’t win. I did notice that my does seemed to do better on the hay I was getting in Napa but it’s so freaking expensive (the last time I bought it there it was over $25/bale) I just can’t bring myself to buy it.
So are you mixing your own grain ration?
We’ve seen some fabulous hay (relative to the hay here) further north. I was soooo tempted to load up the truck, and we actually may make a trip or two north to stock up before the hay gets much worse down here. I am mixing Lotus’ ration, but honestly, I’ve been a bit lazy and started with a standard dairy grain ration, and tweaked it from there. Neither Lotus, nor myself, are particularly thrilled with it though. I think next season, starting with pre-breeding, we’re going to mix the entire ration ourselves. It really is the only way to control, completely, the quality of the composition of the diet.
I can’t believe you’ve had the goats for a year already! Lotus and Minnie are clearly the best goats at the show. Your description of the whole process has been very interesting and delightful to read.
This year has gone fast, hadn’t it? Unfortunately, there are no points for cute at goat shows. We love Lotus, and do see her phenomenal merits outside of the show ring, and are very happy to wait and see how she does next year 🙂
I am always fascinated by your farm tales! Before I started reading your blog, I knew little about goats and had never heard of a goat show. Congratulations to Minnie, but according to my own (un)expert opinion, Lotus and Minnie are both Grand champions!
Awww, thanks Deb. They’re both grand champions to us too! 😀
Wow- kinda exciting. These two are ready for their own reality TV show. Congrats. They look great.
Oh good grief…Minnie is already a diva, I can just imagine how impossible she’d be with her own show! 😛
Very interesting to see what you get out of the shows – useful information, besides the thrill of competing — and winning! Sure does seem like a lot of work. Oh I just realized that does and does are spelled the same. Ha!
The constructive criticism and evaluation of the goats in the ring is very helpful, as is the opportunity to other breeder’s goats as well. It does seem like a lot of work sometimes though, at least getting things around here set so the poor farm-sitters aren’t overwhelmed! Usually, by the time we get to the show, we can relax a little 🙂