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Suzanne Nee - Central Point, Oregon

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ONE MORE ASPECT OF CAPRINE CARE
GIVING...A STITCH IN TIME SAVES NINE
Reprinted with permission
from Sue Reith , Carmelita
Toggs, Bainbridge
Island, WA
Originally posted June 2, 2002 on the Goats
List.
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I would like to thank Sue Reith of
Carmelita
Toggs, Bainbridge Island, WA
sharing her articles for others to read.
This is one of those times when it's hard to give a
management tip, because I sense that it will not be
well-received by many people. But in this particular case I
will forge ahead, mindful that the old adage, 'A stitch in
time saves nine' appears apropos. My goal is, as always, to
save a few goats from disaster...
Not many of us who really enjoy animals, and whose children
(because they are ours, of course! <smile>) usually
feel the same way, would ever even consider that we need to
sit down and talk frankly but kindly to our beloved
children/grandchildren about certain important aspects of
goats. But sometimes it is judicious to do just that.
Frankly, I never thought about it either when my own
children were growing up. And due, I suspect, to sheer luck,
I never personally had a negative experience that made me
regret not having done so. But now, as an adult, I find that
with relative frequency, maybe once every year or so, I get
presented by a distraught owner with the symptoms of a
rather strange but by now familiar syndrome... After I ask
all of my usual background questions (you know... General
demeanor, temp, interest in food, current vaccinations,
signs of pain, et al... The whole gamut... ) as I try to
formulate a suggested diagnosis/cure for the problem, I
start to recognize the pattern in the owners' responses:
The description is of an animal that has heretofore appeared
healthy and doing well. Then, suddenly and without warning,
the owner discovers that it has lost the use of its
hindquarters. It is unable to walk, but struggles to push
itself upward anyway. It is clearly in much pain. The temp
is normal. The owner was not witness any causative event,
but he/she surmises it to be anything from the victim's pen
mates beating it up, to sabotage by a neighbor, to sudden
onset of some fast-acting, possibly communicable, disease.
My first thought, until I start asking specific questions,
is always 'copper deficiency' but I toss that in a hurry
since the animal is attempting to rise, showing pain and
unable to push the body upward to a standing position
despite its frustrated efforts. A copper-deficiency case
does not show pain, and makes no effort to push itself
upwards, but instead is described as resignedly 'sitting
like a dog'. Further, the demeanor of the copper-deficiency
kid is 'bright-eyed and bushy-tailed'. Its only problem
seems to be that it has no use of the hind legs.
Sometimes the owner will take the goat immediately in to the
vet's office, where the puzzled vet runs various tests in an
attempt to determine the cause of this phenomenon, and comes
up empty-handed. The vet will often keep the animal at the
hospital for several days 'for observation', and within the
week he/she usually recommends to the owner that the kind
thing to do would be to euthanize the goat, and that is
that. If the goat is cared for at home it continues the
behavior mentioned above without improvement until one
morning, about a week after it all started, the owner comes
out to find it dead.
Now this is the hard part of the story... The first time I
saw this syndrome was back in about 1984. It happened that
the victim was a Saanen yearling doe that I had placed with
a friend. The friend loved the goat, as did her 12-year old
daughter, and they gave her much devoted attention. She was
a happy goat. Then one day that Spring the girl brought a
best girlfriend home from school, as she had done many times
before, and the two girls joyously took this Saanen yearling
doe for a walk down the country lane, as they had also done
many times before. A short while later the daughter came
home sobbing, telling her mother that suddenly the young
Saanen doe had collapsed, for no reason at all, and that the
mother would have to come and get her. They brought the goat
home, and she was the first goat that I personally ever saw
with the symptoms I describe above. I knew intuitively what
had happened. I sat down with the mother and told her as
gently as I could (big mistake!) that while her daughter was
devoted to the goat, and had no wish ever to harm her, I
suspected that the two girls were clowning around and one
decided to find out what it would be like to ride this doe
like a pony. That was all it took. The goat would have had
to collapse immediately. I told the mother that I knew in my
heart that the girl must be absolutely devastated and full
of remorse, having not had a clue that their game could
result in such a disaster, but that I suspected she would
not be able to tell the mother what had taken place and, in
fact, her poor daughter would probably have to carry that
secret in a heavy heart forever. The mother was angry with
me for suggesting such a thing, and defensive, saying that
the daughter would never, could never, hurt that goat...
that she loved that goat. I understand that, which is why it
was such a particularly tragic situation. The goat died
about a week later.
Since that time this same scenario has repeated itself in
contacts from goat owners looking for assistance every year
or so... I get cries for help from owners that go out into
the pen one day to find their favorite animal suddenly,
without warning, having totally lost the ability to use the
hindquarters... Trying to stand, showing pain, no temp,
surviving about a week or so, and then dying. I have no
doubt that some child or children that had access to the
goat, with no malice intended, entered into a 'group
mentality' while playing with friends or siblings and
thought, with not the slightest idea of what the
consequences might be, that it would be lots of fun to play
cowboy, using the goat for a horse. They see children on TV
riding ponies and horses routinely. These young children can
be the most caring youngsters in the world, and there is no
way they would know that sitting on that goat would cause
irreparable damage to the spinal column. At the same time,
caring as they are, and knowing they had, albeit
unintentionally, caused the damage, it is highly unlikely
that they could tell mom or dad or grandma or grandpa how
the goat got the way it did. So they say nothing, but
internally they feel quite distraught.
In my questioning, when asked for help diagnosing these
situations, unless the owner has already volunteered the
information I always inquire as to who the caregivers of the
goat are. Invariably there are children around that really,
genuinely like those goats. I have learned the hard way not
to suggest to the goat owners the scenario I've presented
above, but as an alternative I thought that perhaps the most
positive thing I might do would be to make it my mission to
encourage all goat owners who have young children in their
lives to take a few moments with these children and, without
threats or recrimination, but with caring tones, discuss the
fragility of these wonderful animals and come right out and
explain to these young people what might happen if anyone
ever decided to sit on a goat... That they are not designed
like ponies and horses and they cannot support the weight of
a human, and that we, as their caregivers, must always
respect this fact and protect them from harm. We must
prepare these young people so that if they ever find
themselves in a group situation where someone does suggest
playing cowboy with a goat, they will be prepared to quickly
explain why that is not a good idea. This is where my
'stitch in time' adage comes in, and I would really
encourage goat owners to pay it heed.
Addendum: Last year, having just
written and posted this to the list, I stepped outdoors and,
while it was fresh on my mind, commented to the neighbors'
two lovely children, a girl and a boy, about how very
fragile the backbone of a goat is, and that they could
really hurt the animal should they ever decide to ride one
of them. At the time, having asked my permission, they were
playing with my 2 Togg Sr Kids in my goat pen. When those
words came out of my mouth the little girl turned to me in
shock, and she said, "But, you NEVER TOLD US not to do
that!"
Sue Reith
Carmelita Toggs
Bainbridge Island WA
E-Mail: suereith@msn.com
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Sue Reith (fka: Sue Thie), a
retired educator, began raising dairy goats in 1970
under the Carmelita Toggs herd name. Over the past
30+ years she has shown her goats avidly, winning
the ADGA Togg Nat'l Champion titles in 1984 and
1985. Disability retired now, she no longer shows
her animals, but stays very busy with them at home.
In addition she raises Australian Shepherds under
the Island Air kennel name. Over these same past
30+ years she has written numerous articles on
nearly all aspects of caprine management for a
variety of goat journals and, since 1997, for the
Internet as well.
E-Mail: suereith@msn.com
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Sue Reith , Carmelita Toggs,
Bainbridge Island, WA
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