Hoof Care Information

  • theholisticgoat

    Organizer
    April 20, 2023 at 10:11 am

    “We successfully developed a reliable method for assessing hoof conformation in dairy goats using photographs. Two aspects of hoof conformation that were subjectively assessed were validated by the comparison of the subjective scores with objective measures. The use of photographs with scale markers allowed for objective measures to be completed; however, this was time consuming and required technical equipment. As two of the subjective scores were shown to correspond to objective measures, they are suitable methods for conformation assessment. High levels of accuracy and reliability (>0.8) were achieved on the photographs in this study; if higher levels were required, than collapsing the scores into a binary method should be considered. Nevertheless, further work is required to test the reliability and practicality of subjective hoof conformation assessment on live animals and to determine if it is applicable in an on-farm setting.”

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6912638/

  • theholisticgoat

    Organizer
    August 15, 2023 at 8:20 pm

    This whole line has bad feet that grow quickly and are soft so they want to fold over and be a pain to trim. My goats pasture on about 5 acres of mostly bottomland with a little hillside, few rocks. This wether is 1.5 years old. I have never trimmed his feet. Getting your goats moving can make a HUGE difference in how often you need to trim. Even on small spaces, you can do this by putting rough rocks and debris for them to climb on, tar paper for roofing on plywood, cinder blocks, etc. Goat walks daily can help tremendously as well.

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