I have 6 Cashmere Fainting Goats. They are all fairly old now (10 - 14 yrs.) except for one that is about 4 years old. Historically they eat about 1 ton of
hay a year. That's about a pound of rough
feed per goat per day. The rest they glean from the pasture which is about 1/5 of an acre or 9500 sf.
I have split the pasture into two 'paddocks' this year (opposite direction as last year and with semi-permanent
fence. I plan to split into 4 paddocks by the end of the summer (see plan).
The split has been in place for three weeks, and this is the difference in grazing/no-graze (see photo).
The goats do not seem to have fluctuated in weight, based on appearance, but the 1/2 pasture is pretty 'beat' it is short and needs a lot of
water to keep the green going. By the end of June, the seasonal grasses will have stopped growing at any rate.
The un-cut half is over-seed with the same mix from last year as the grazed portion, so now we can see the poly-cultural blend of grass, buckwheat and Vernal alfalfa mixed with residual ;
native' pasture grasses and weeds, in some areas about 9" tall. The growth shades the soil and it holds (visible) moisture in the soil, three times as long as the grazed areas. (spray-head irrigation is not zoned; it waters all the pasture when operational).
My plan is to move the goats to the 'overgrown paddock' in three more weeks and see how long it takes the goats to eat it down without hay supplement. That way I can gauge what the potential is in pasture forage to reduce imported hay. I will continue to augment with mowed grass from formal
yard, tree and shrub trimming as well as weeds from yard and goodies from humans.
Upon completion of data collection from full-season, I hope to be able to draw some conclusions about how much hay to import for next year.
My gut says I may be able to cut it in half.