Tips for Bringing New Goats Home
If you purchase your goats from a breeder who lives across the country, the breeder is responsible for getting the goats to a shipper, and all you have to do is find out where to pick them up. If you bought the goats from a neighbor and they are trained to lead, just put them on leashes and lead them home. If you’re buying goats in any other situation, you need to figure out in advance how to get them home.
Some of these methods won’t work for large goats, but you can transport goats in the following ways:
Pet carriers or crates with straw or wood shavings for bedding. If you’re moving the goat in an open truck bed in cold weather, cover the crate with a rug or tarp to keep the wind down and keep the goat warmer.
The back of an SUV, van, or the back seat of a car.
Cover the seat with a tarp and towels for those accidents that occur during transport.
On the towel-covered lap of a passenger. Goats that are being held and aren’t standing up will not pee on you, but they will poop.
The back of a truck with a canopy. Make sure to put down plenty of straw.
A horse trailer or another trailer with fencing or cattle panels to make it high enough to prevent escape. Cover an open trailer in extreme weather conditions to protect the goats from rain and wind.
Regardless of how you transport your new goats, to make the trip as stress-free as possible, do the following:
Load the goats carefully.
Make sure they have adequate bedding or padding.
Start, stop, and take turns or curves slowly and smoothly.
If your trip will take many hours or days, provide the goats with hay during the trip and stop every 3 to 4 hours to let them eat, drink, and regain their equilibrium.
If you’re getting your first goats, you don’t have anyone to quarantine your new goats from. You just get them situated in their new digs. But if you’re adding goats to an existing herd, you need to quarantine the new goats for at least 30 days.

Goat Glossary
abscess
An inflamed collection of pus caused by bacteria.

Goat Glossary
brood doe
A female goat that is kept for breeding purposes.

Goat Glossary

Goat Glossary
buckling
A young male goat.

Goat Glossary
cannon bone
The shin bone.

Goat Glossary
Caseous lymphadenitis CLA
A highly contagious disease caused by a bacterium, Cornybacterium pseudotuberculosis.

Goat Glossary
chaffhaye
Roughage that has the added benefit of containing good bacteria that aid in digestion.

Goat Glossary
chine
The are of a goat's spine directly behind the withers.

Goat Glossary
colostrum
A rich, immune-system-boosting fluid that kids need during their first days after birth.

Goat Glossary

Goat Glossary

Goat Glossary
doeling
A young female goat.

Goat Glossary
enterotoxemia
A disease also called overeating disease because it comes about when a goat eats too much grain, lush grasses, or milk.

Goat Glossary
escutcheon
The area between the back legs, where the udder lies in a doe.

Goat Glossary
foreudder attachment
Attachment of the front of the udder by the belly.

Goat Glossary
foundation stock
The stock you start your breeding program with.

Goat Glossary

Goat Glossary
fuzzy goat show
A goat show held in the early spring in a part of the country where the weather is still cold; you only need to do minimal clipping.

Goat Glossary
hypocalcemia
Often called milk fever, this is a deficiency of calcium in the blood that arises when a doe doesn’t get enough calcium in her diet to support her needs and the needs of her unborn kids.

Goat Glossary
ketosis
A metabolic imbalance that usually goes hand-in-hand with hypocalcemia. It is caused when a goat doesn’t get enough energy because she has stopped eating.

Goat Glossary
kid
A goat less than a year old.

Goat Glossary
mastitis
An inflammation of the udder, often caused by bacteria.

Goat Glossary
milk stand
A piece of equipment that a goat stands on with her head secured.

Goat Glossary
pannier
A pair of baskets or bags designed to carry loads on the backs of pack animals.

Goat Glossary
pasteurization
The heating of milk to destroy bacteria and other harmful organisms.

Goat Glossary
polled
Naturally hornless.

Goat Glossary
precocious milker
A doe that has udder development and milk production without kidding.

Goat Glossary
registered goat
A goat that meets the standards of appearance for its breed and is recorded in the herdbook of the goat association for that particular breed. A registered goat usually is a purebred but may be a crossbreed (called an American or an Experimental).

Goat Glossary
rolag
A cylindrical roll of wool or fleece that is used to spin yarn.

Goat Glossary
roving
A long strand of ready-to-spin carded fiber.

Goat Glossary
ruminant
An animal that has a stomach with four compartments and chews cud as part of the digestive process.

Goat Glossary
scours
The term that livestock owners use to talk about diarrhea in their animals.

Goat Glossary
sire
A goat's father; the act of fathering a goat.

Goat Glossary
stifle joint
The equivalent of a knee in a goat.

Goat Glossary
thurl
The hip joint, usually referred to in relation to the levelness between the thurls.

Goat Glossary
wether
A castrated male goat.

Goat Glossary
withers
The area of a goat's spine where the shoulder blades meet at the base of the neck.

Goat Glossary
yearling
A goat that is between one and two years old.