PYGMY QUADS
born June 2008
Dam; Mountcross Lyra
Sire; Marshview Hero
The first kid born was head first (front legs back)
This is usual for this nanny and I always have to help her.
However this male kid (blue and white) was pretty small so
she managed ok. The next kid was a miniscule female (weight
about 700g) so thin and emaciated and breech and not much
sign of life. A good dry towelling and a trip indoors to dry
her off with a hair dryer!! she was breathing and fairly
alert ... but soooo small!!!
I did not hold out much hope for her to be honest. Next was
a standard size male kid head first (front legs back) but
delivered ok. Thought that must be it but 10 mins later all
action again for a big male tri colour kid. Head first
(front legs back) and quite a bit of help required by me to
deliver. Spent four days getting head butted by nanny... who
has horns... whilst i milked off tiny quantities to syringe
into mouth of tiny girl. She could not walk for two days and
also had to wear a little fleece jacket ... made by me (modelled
on my miniature ponies rugs). I started mixing mums milk
with goat milk from Budgens on the second day and her feeds
were replaced totally by shop whole goat milk by the fourth
day. She was now up and about and trying to feed from mum
but mum not so keen on her as her lusty sons and kept moving
away... more injuries to me as I forceably held mum so
little girl could feed four times a day, suplemented with
shop goat milk. No
lamb feeder teat was small enough for her tiny mouth so I
had a puppy/kitten feeder and used that. I have now (day
six) ... removed two big male kids from mum for 3 hours
early in the morning and two hours around lunch time and
three hours in the evening and put them in adjacent pen. I
am feeding them with ewe milk replacer with a standard lamb
bottle and teat. They seem happy enough with this and can
see mum. They spend all night all together. Little girls
tummy looks round and full and she can skip and play now.
Removing the big boys allows the little girl and smaller boy
to feed uninterupted and mum accepts the little girl feeding
now... thankfully!! as my leg is black and blue.
I am quite hopefull that she will make it now... she weighs
nearly 1kg today. I will have to judge how to feed them all
in the future, the nanny is coping well at the moment by I
am unsure how she will manage as they all get bigger and
milk demand goes up. May separate the big boys completely in
a week or two. Will start offering lamb creep pellets in a
few days. Mum is getting as much corn as she wants and
branches and grass cut. I would normally have let her out
with her kids but don't want her to wonder off with the big
boys until I know the smaller ones can keep up.
I have never heard of a sheep or goat having four lambs/kids
before and I shall be chuffed to bits if they all make it.
..... wish there had been more girls though, three boys!!
not fair!!!
Heather McBreen
Little
girl - smallest of the quads.
Filling
out nicely now.
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