posted 9 years ago
I have had the best results with all three in the same "herd."
I have 60 acres of about half weedy pasture, half open brush (approaching Savannah with grass growing under the trees). My herd is about 30 cattle, 30 sheep, and 10 goats. And one horse as a guardian. That is well above the normal stocking density for this area.
I found that I could add 1-2 sheep for every cow and they actually improved the stocking density of the cattle on my pasture. More than that started to reduce the amount of cattle I could run. That is my mix of cattle and pasture. YMMV.
Goats are really a separate equation, as it is the brush that determines their stocking rate, but those numbers you gave sound like good ballpark figures to start with. I used to run a lot more goats, but scaled back after I cleared the brush.
For the record, I run mostly Scottish highland cattle with some jersey highland cross, mixed breed hair sheep, and saanan dairy goats.
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