Cocoa, Theresa's dam, is nice enough but she tends to be a hands-off kind of gal. She passes her skittishness around humans along to her kids. Theresa is a very sweet little kid, but unlike the kids who will race to greet me and taste my boots or climb up onto me, Theresa keeps her own counsel. At long last, both kids were cornered and carried off. They were glad to join their herd when they arrived at the daycare pen.
Our good neighbor Theresa came over to sit on the porch for a bit, and to meet her namesake. We filmed Phyllis's attempts to catch the kid, and the phenomenal power of Theresa's lungs when caught. Yet, as soon as the kid was passed over the fence and placed into Theresa's arms, she thoroughly relaxed. Heck, she even cuddled. The change was remarkable and each Theresa seemed taken with the other creature bearing that name.
When the shadows grew long, we opened the gate to the daycare. By shaking a bucket of grain, we enticed the goat gals to follow smartly along behind us, and the kids stuck close to their dams for the short trip back up to the home pasture.
Hopefully, we'll get them back out to the green grass frequently enough that the home pasture's recovery will be hastened. So far the greening patches look tasty but are not yet worthy of serious grazing.
For some refreshing reading, goat aficionados will enjoy Brad Kessler's Goat Song: A Seasonal Life, A Short History of Herding, and the Art of Making Cheese
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