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How do I Start Raising Meat Goats?

Marjorie McAtee
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Updated: Jun 04, 2024
Views: 7,655
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Raising meat goats can be a profitable farming venture. If you want to start raising meat goats, you should be aware that meat goats, while considered easier to care for than some meat animals, still require some skill to raise. Good breeding stock is generally considered important to raising good meat goats. Meat goats typically need good nutrition. They generally benefit from protection from predators and parasites.

If you want to start raising meat goats, you may first want to consider whether there is a market for your meat goats. Ethnic populations, including some Muslims, people from the Caribbean and Hispanics, are considered most likely to be in the market for goat meat. The costs of land and goat feed can substantially diminish your profits, depending on where you're beginning your meat goat raising enterprise. Many farmers recommend raising meat goats on uncultivated land used by larger farming operations, such as cattle farms, rather than investing in land specifically for the purpose of raising meat goats.

One of the factors you may want to consider if you would like to start farming meat goats is fencing. Fencing can help protect your goats and your investment. Traditional cattle fences are often inadequate to hold in goats. Cattle panels generally make a more efficient meat goat fence.

An electric fence with a minimum charge of 4,000 volts is generally considered effective against meat goats. Barbed wire goat fences should contain at least eight strands of evenly spaced horizontal wire. Smaller goats and kids can often slip through the gaps in many non-electrified fences.

Meat goats need shelter from rain, snow, and cold weather. A south-facing, open shed can provide shelter. The shed should be about 4 feet (1.2 meters) to 6 feet (1.8 meters) high at the rear eave and 6 feet (1.8 meters) to 8 feet (2.4 meters) high at the front eave. Each goat should be able to have 5 square feet (1.5 square meters) to itself.

To ensure the success of your meat goat enterprise, you may want to choose the healthiest possible goats for your breeding stock. Meat goats should generally be purchased from reputable goat breeders. Choose younger goats with shiny coats and sturdy horns, teeth, and udders. Goat breeders can typically tell you how many kids their goats produce and how many of those kids survive to adulthood.

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Marjorie McAtee
By Marjorie McAtee
Marjorie McAtee, a talented writer and editor with over 15 years of experience, brings her diverse background and education to everything she writes. With degrees in relevant fields, she crafts compelling content that informs, engages, and inspires readers across various platforms. Her ability to understand and connect with audiences makes her a skilled member of any content creation team.

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Discussion Comments
By MrsPramm — On Oct 17, 2014

@irontoenail - That's one reason I'd say that raising goats of milk is completely different to raising them for meat and people need to be aware of which would suit them better. I know more than one person who bought goats with the intention of eventually putting them in the freezer and ended up thinking of them like members of the family. And I know people who bought goats intending to milk them who ended up failing miserably because they didn't have the time and effort to put into the enterprise.

By irontoenail — On Oct 16, 2014

@pastanaga - I just want to point out that the fact that goats will eat anything can be a good thing and a bad thing. When raising goats for meat it's usually a good thing because it means you can get good conversion rates on bad grazing land. But it also means they could potentially eat something poisonous that other animals would avoid.

Basically you get out of this whatever you put in. If you're hoping to buy a handful of goats and just let them loose on scrub land without taking much care of them you aren't going to end up with much return.

By pastanaga — On Oct 15, 2014

Do a lot of research before buying your first goats. They can be an excellent animal for smallholders to raise, but they are sensitive, creative and intelligent and that makes them very difficult to contain without using the proper techniques. You can fence them in the same way you would fence in sheep or cattle. They will just climb or leap over an ordinary fence.

And they will nibble on anything that looks interesting in their vicinity. They aren't quite up to eating tin cans like they do in cartoons, but that particular misconception comes from their habit of eating the paper labels from tin cans if they get hold of them.

This is what makes them so good to help clear land, because they will eat plants too thorny or tough for other animals.

Raising meat goats can be profitable and satisfying, but it's not easy and you need to be able to take care of the animals before you start.

Marjorie McAtee
Marjorie McAtee
Marjorie McAtee, a talented writer and editor with over 15 years of experience, brings her diverse background and education to everything she writes. With degrees in relevant fields, she crafts compelling content that informs, engages, and inspires readers across various platforms. Her ability to understand and connect with audiences makes her a skilled member of any content creation team.
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