Breeding goes hand in hand with evaluating your herd. I think there is too much voodoo written about line breeding and inbreeding. Stop thinking of breeding in human terms! Line breeding and inbreeding is very important and is done in most herds that are successfully shown, those with excellent udders, very good milk production and just general good conformation.
True that this magnifies both the bad and the good in your herd but if you have a good foundation then it is my opinion that line breeding is the only way you will continue to produce those fine animals. This is done by many breeders of all other breeds. Since the Kinder is specifically from two major breeds it is of the up most importance to do everything possible to pass these good genes on down the generation lines of the Kinder goat.
I almost shudder any more when I hear a Kinder breeder say, “Oh, I have just got to get new blood in my herd, I need something entirely unrelated to my other goats”. I have seen Kinder herds go from a top notch herd, to much lesser than in a hurry, when just adding one new herd sire.
If you have a herd that has general good conformation, that are milking well anything from 4 pounds up per day and if those animals are truly dual purpose showing a good meat carcass, then why do you want to change that? If you have sold animals to other breeders then go buy something from their lines that also has your lines in it. In this way you will be adding back some of your own genetics. If you completely cross out of your line it is hard telling what you might get. Genetics is a wild and wonderful world and we as Kinder breeders by breeding 50/50 are trying to fool mother nature into producing a goat that will continue to produces animals that conforms to our breed standards
Saturday, October 6, 2012
Monday, October 1, 2012
Kinder Goats for Meat
Selling, Butchering and Processing Your Goats
By Jean Jajan
By Jean Jajan
With winter coming on, many goat breeders thoughts turn to
what to do with those excess young males or cull kids. We don’t want the expense of wintering too
many non productive animals. There
are many options open for the breeder.
The first and most common is to advertise that you have
goats for sale. This can be done
in the paper, through a sign on the bulletin board at the feed store or an ad
on Craig’s list. Also depending on
the area you live in you might try to post a sign in the ethnic grocery stores. This way you can target the Hispanic
population or the middle eastern population depending on your area. One thing to remember though is that
usually the middle eastern population wants a completely intact male only. This would mean only buck kids that
have not been castrated or disbudded.
They do not take females. There
is a member on the Oregon coast who sells her wethers to the Hispanic
population for $100 a piece for the weaned kids and they go like hot cakes.
When I sell an animal for slaughter I do not allow it to be dispatched
on my place and I know many other sellers that don’t either. This is a personal choice as I don’t
know what technique they use and would rather not be present. While I hope all the animals I sell for
meat are dispatched with a properly executed gunshot, I know that many have
their throat slit and are bled out.
The second way to sell off those meat kids is to take them
to a sales barn. Many rural areas
have a livestock sales barn and you can consign them there. When I did this I dropped them off and
preferred not to remain. They tend
not to handle the animals the way we do and I prefer not to see it.
The third option is becoming a member of a meat goat
association. These associations
help members market their goats.
The association I was a member of had a livestock buyer come to a
central point and weigh and buy the goats. There was a pool coordinator whom the member would call and
commit their kids to the pool.
When there were enough committed to fill a truck the sellers met at a
location with a scale and the buyer weighed and paid for the kids then and
loaded them up and took them to the slaughter house.
There are also livestock buyers that have a schedule of
coming every few weeks to a public livestock scale and buying livestock. Check with the local feed stores as
they might know of one that does this.
I take a lot of my kids there as I know I only have to wait a few weeks
and I call him to find out what he is paying.
My favorite way of getting rid of my excess kids though is
to put them in my freezer. Why not
put your great hormone free, antibiotic free, low fat, low cholesterol meat on
your own table. If you are a
hunter you might want to dispatch the goat yourself and dress it out like you
would a deer. The preferred way to
dispatch a goat is to use a gun with a 22 long rifle hollow point bullet. The proper way is to place the barrel
of the gun right behind the poll or horn area and angle it toward the front of
the lower jaw. This will instantly
kill the animal. A goat should not
be shot through the front of the head as the skull is very hard and dense in
that area.
There are several web sites that show how to butcher an
animal. One that I find
informative is http://www.ozarkjewels.net/homebutchering.htm
.
For those of you who, like me, do not hunt or feel that they
can’t dispatch one of their own goats here are a few good options. One is a full service butcher who runs
a slaughter and will do the kill and cut, wrap, and freeze. All you have to do is drop the goat off
the night before or early morning of the butchering and pick up a nice box of
frozen goat meat ready to drop in your freezer a few days later. Check with feed stores and custom
butchers. In our area it runs
about $120 per goat.
The second is to contact a mobile farm butcher. Ours has his ad in the paper several
times a week and is booked weeks in advance. A mobile butcher will come to your farm and slaughter the
animal there. He will skin and
dress the animal and take it to his butchering facility or possibly one you
choose in his refrigerated truck.
He cleans up and hoses the area down afterwards and leaves almost no
trace. My farm kill truck charges
$60 per goat for the kill and takes it to any of the several custom butcher
shops in the area. The cut and
wrap costs about another $60.
How you have your goat cut up is all a matter of preference. I like meat in something, so I
generally do not have chops or steaks cut. They tend to be rather small and a bit dry. I will have one or both hind legs done
in a boneless rolled roast. I have
the loins and tenderloins taken out from the spine and packaged. The ribs I have cut from the spine and
packaged. The rest of the meat I
have half of it ground and half of it cubed. I have the butcher crack the neck bones and shanks and
package them for soup stock.
If I have an older buck slaughtered I have him packaged
separately and the packages marked.
Some tend to be a bit tougher and a little gamey so I want to know which
is which as I use a more tenderizing method of cooking and more seasoning.
As for how to prepare goat, I don’t feel there are any
specific goat recipes. I use my
favorite recipes for stews and casseroles. I use the loin meat for fajitas or something that I need the
most tender cuts for. Braising
with its lower temperature, moisture and covering during cooking is the secret
to cooking with goat.
Labels:
butcher,
chevon,
dual purpose,
meat,
processing,
recipe,
sale
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