Thursday, October 30, 2008

Advocates of safe sex: goats act as role models for kids

Goat 'condoms' save Kenyan herds

By Ruth Nesoba
BBC News, Nairobi

Goat wearing an olor
The olor is held in place by a rope or an elastic strap

Maasai herdsmen in Kenya have turned to an age-old contraceptive device, the "olor", to protect their precious goat herds from an ongoing drought.

The olor is made from cowhide or a square piece of plastic, and is tied around the belly of the male goat.

It prevents the bucks from mating with the female goats.

The herdsmen are using the device to limit the goat population and ensure there are not too many animals grazing on sparse vegetation.

"We don't want them to breed in this drought," says Mr Ole Ngoshoi Kipameto, a goat owner in Kajiado district.

Vital assets

The area, which is 80km (50 miles) from the capital, Nairobi, has received insufficient rainfall, making the landscape barren and forcing residents to move from place to place in search of pasture and water.

In the Maasai community, livestock are often people's only assets and sole means of survival.

"We tie this hide under the belly of the buck for three months. After that we remove it and then they can breed by November when the short rains come," Mr Kipameto says.

Herdsmen putting an olor on a goat
The olor saves employing separate herdsmen for male and female goats

The rectangular piece of cowhide is passed over the buck's head and front legs and secured under the belly in front of the hind legs with a rope or elastic strap.

"It looks like an apron," Mr Kipameto says.

Peter Ndirangu, the area livestock officer, says the olor is very effective.

"In the modern method, we advocate keeping the bucks separate from the breeding goats. But that is an added cost as you require two herdsmen - one for the bucks and one for the goats," he says.

"This [device] will play the part of a herdsman."

He says the device is very useful in keeping the herd numbers down and controlling when the goats give birth.

"If they give birth during harsh conditions like now, the mothers - the does - are going to be very weak, they're not going to feed their young ones properly," he says.

The device helps the herdsmen to restrict kidding to the period during and after the rains.

If the rains fall in October and November, the dry landscape will turn green again and the herdsmen will be able to settle with their livestock.

Until then, the herdsmen will have to employ the olor to protect their livestock and livelihood safe.

Those who do not use it could face a hefty fine if their bucks are found guilty of impregnating another herder's doe.

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Goats 101: Small Ruminant Production Medicine and Management


Videos available in the Small Ruminant Manual after purchase:
  • Wool - Quality Evaluation and Manufacturing Processes
  • Skirting
  • Castrating Lambs and Kids
  • Hock lock, Surgical Castration, Emasculator, Bloodless Castration
  • Dipping Navels
  • Docking Lambs
  • Burdizzo, Elastrator
  • Drawing Blood
  • Drenching
  • Eye Care
  • Ointment
  • Hoof Trimming
  • Dewclaws, Foot
  • Tube Feeding (Esophageal Feeder)
There's just so much to learn!

Friday, October 24, 2008

Sometimes all it takes to save a child is a goat. - 60 Minutes, CBS News Magazine Program



Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Goats in the Arts: Song of the Sea Goat (1973)

The days of my youth were spent, as I imagine yours were, listening to Burl Ives records.  It is no surprise that I favored Burl Ives Sings 'Little White Duck' (And Other Children's Favorites), given that this particular LP includes a heartwarming rendition of "Bill Grogan's Goat".  A sweet celebration of the bravery, timeliness and appetite of that nameless goat, the song is truly timeless for an audience of any age.
 
I have recently become aware of another timeless, albeit more complex and mature, goat composition.  We can thank Pete Sinfield and dreamy 1973 for this gem entitled "Song of the Sea Goat" (art by Koldo Barroso): 

The sea goat casts Aquarian runes through beads of mirrored tears,

Suave pirates words of apricot crawl out of your veneer

Anoint your eyes with Midas’ oil and make it still appear

Aladdin’s lamp is glowing bright transmuting panacea;

To fill your souls with sugared holes.

“Oh can’t you hear” sang the sea goat “the nonsense makes me numb.”
“It’s near, it’s clear” sang the sea goat “we live to overcome,

The madman’s voice and his nowhere choice,

The pain that drains like an endless day of rain.”

The sea goat reads the flight of birds and writes upon the sand;

Gold waterfalls of autumn wheat slip through a pointing hand

Whose fingers stiff with sentences still beckon to the band

To play the “Best Foot Forward March” and deafen all the land.

With hollow words, it’s so absurd!

“Take your stand” sang the sea goat “the night goes on and on.”

“Unwrap your plans” sang the sea goat “tell everyone you’ve gone

To touch the earth and to see the birth

The smile, the style down an unspun mile of life.”

It fills the air! It fills the air!

The song of the sea goat shaking in the domes

The song of the sea goat as endlessly he roams,

Between the sunset’s crimson veil

On smooth grey streets where the drunkard spins his tale.

The sea goat sips and hurls his glass along the smoke-filled road

Where shuttered snakes of brakeless trains run aching with their load

Of spring-eyed, tonguetied, wooldyed lads who kiss the L-shaped goat

Which soon will smear their uniforms with blood, whitewash & woad.

Damn iron minded, gold braid blinded, officers and gentlemen!
“God!” sang the sea goat “is always on both sides.”

“Change” sang the sea goat “is constant as the tides."
“And this play” sang the sea goat “is strangely synthesised

When you're part of a cast where the first comes last

Where the east goes west and the sun is burning out
And you're part of a cast where the first comes last

Where the east goes west and the sun is burning out”

Lyrics © copyright Pete Sinfield 1973.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Goats in the News: Plight of Imprisoned Goats Resolved

God Bless Mr. Nyamugabo.  This just in from the BBC:

DR Congo frees goats from prison

A minister in the Democratic Republic of Congo has ordered a Kinshasa jail to release a dozen goats, which he said were being held there illegally.

Deputy Justice Minister Claude Nyamugabo said he found the goats just in time during a routine jail visit.

The beasts were due to appear in court, charged with being sold illegally by the roadside.

The minister said many police had serious gaps in their knowledge and they would be sent for retraining.

Mr Nyamugabo was conducting a routine visit to the prison when, he said, he was astonished to discover not only humans, but a herd of goats crammed into a prison cell in the capital.

He has blamed the police for the incident.

It is not clear what will happen to the owners of the goats, who have also been imprisoned.

BBC Africa analyst Mary Harper says that given the grim state of prisons in Congo, the goats will doubtless be relieved about being spared a trial.

There was no word on what their punishment would have been, had they been found guilty.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/africa/7607460.stm

Monday, October 6, 2008

Goat Consumption and Identity


Conclusive support of goatmaster.W's enlightening response to her Trial the Fourth.

Please contact her directly for more information on the ramifications this may have on the collective identity and self-perception of the Goat P.A.L.

(Full article at http://lubbockonline.com/stories/100608/loc_340718620.shtml)

Goat industry growing in region, says expert
By Henri Brickey AVALANCHE-JOURNAL
Monday, October 06, 2008Story last updated at 10/6/2008 - 2:57 am

As the cost of feed and land escalates, a growing number of people looking to raise livestock on the South Plains are focusing on the other red meat - goat.

Just in Lubbock, there are about 2,000 head of breeding-age meat goat does, and that number is increasing according to Robert Scott, a Texas AgriLife Extension agent in Lubbock.
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Many of the people raising goats in the Lubbock area are small-time operations with anywhere between 10 to 50 heads, according to Scott. Some operations, like Windy Acres Boers west of Lubbock, are larger.

Dr. Frank Craddock, a professor and goat specialist at the Texas A&M Research and Extension Center in San Angelo, said goats have been growing in popularity among breeders.
"The meat goat industry has boomed since the early 1990s," Craddock said.
Goat meat is the most widely consumed meat in the world, but the United States consumes only a fraction of that.

While goat meat is popular in Mexico, the Middle East and other parts of the world, the demand in the U.S. is growing.

"The Muslim and Mexican populations are growing in the U.S. and those people eat goat," Craddock said.

The amount of goat meat consumed in the U.S. increased from 25.8 million pounds per year in 1997 to 50.9 million pounds in 2003, according to the American Meat Goat Association. At the same time, the cost of goat meat in the U.S. has also increased - from 75 cents per pound in 1996 to $1.36 per pound in 2005, the association reports.

Today, America imports much of the goat meat consumed here, but a growing goat population here in the U.S., and especially Texas, is helping supply the demand.

A decade ago, Texas was the goat-breeding capital of the U.S.

Eighty five percent of all goats in U.S. were in Texas in mid-1990s, according to Craddock. Since then, goat breeding has gained popularity in other states and today Texas is home to about half of the nation's goat population, according to Craddock.

"Goats do well in a dry climate and that's why they do well out here in West Texas," Craddock said.

Don Handley and his wife Sharon own the Get-Ya-Goat Ranch in Crosbyton, about 40 miles east of Lubbock.

Handley worms his goats twice a year and occasionally helps with the birthing process.
During the summers, Handley's goats eat a lot of native pasture. In the winter, he supplements with hay and protein blocks. He also hand feeds his goats with day-old bread. Compared to other livestock, Handley says goats cost less to feed.

To comment on this story:
henri.brickey@lubbockonline.com 766-8754

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Goats in Entertainment: SNL

You'll notice Mark Wahlberg doesn't talk to sheep. Ever.

Friday, October 3, 2008

Great Moments in Goat Cinema

So, apparently, this isn't a real movie. Looked pretty real to me. What I want to know is, what kind of a person would create something so wonderful as a joke, knowing full well that hopes would rise and then be dashed as a result? A bad person, that's who. A wool-wearing, lamb chop-eating, sheeps rights-advocating bastard. Sorry for the strong language. There are just some things you don't joke about.

Submitted by degoatee Katie Beyers.