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How to safely milk a mother goat for an adopted baby goat
#1
Many people have been asking, β€œAD, how do you safely milk a mother goat for an adopted baby goat?”

This is the method I use πŸ‘‡πŸ½
   

First, I clean the udder with clean water and foam to remove dirt and bacteria.
After that, I dry the udder with another clean foam because a wet udder can still carry contamination.

Then I wash the feeding bottle properly before milking the goat. Hygiene is very important because dirty equipment can cause diarrhea and infections in baby goats.

Once the milk is collected, I feed it immediately to the adopted baby goat 🍼🐐

One thing many farmers don’t know is that newborn goats have very weak immunity, so cleanliness during feeding can determine whether the baby grows well or falls sick.

Goat farming is not only about feeding animals, management and hygiene matter a lot too.

- Copied from facebook
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#2
Cleanliness is one of the most underrated parts of goat farming. Nice explanation.
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#3
Many people focus only on feeding and forget hygiene. This is very important for baby goats.
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#4
The part about drying the udder after washing is very important. Most people skip that step.
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#5
Experience is the best teacher. Thanks for sharing your method openly.
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#6
Farmers who ignore sanitation usually battle constant infections in their animals.
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#7
I’ve raised goats for years and I can confirm that hygiene during feeding makes a huge difference in kid survival rate.

Many new farmers don’t know that dirty hands or bottles can wipe out an entire batch of newborn kids within days.
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#8
From experience, adopted kids usually grow faster when they are fed fresh warm milk immediately after milking.
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#9
I always tell beginners that preventing infection is easier and cheaper than treating sick baby goats later.
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#10
Experienced farmers know that newborn kids are very sensitive to bacteria, especially during the first two weeks.
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#11
I learned the hard way years ago that poor feeding hygiene can lead to diarrhea and dehydration very quickly.
Proper management practices like this are the reason some farms have low mortality while others keep losing kids.
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#12
Hygiene can save farmers a lot of money on treatment and medication.

Baby goats are very delicate during the first weeks. Clean feeding really matters.
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