How to Feed and Tend Goats on Small Farms

What to feed goats: grain feed, range, chaffhaye, kitchen scraps, hay

Treehugger / Mary McLain

If you're starting a goat herd, you will know that goats require some knowledge to feed them right. Whether raising goats for meat, establishing a dairy herd, or just practicing sustainable living on your homestead, goats need attention to their nutrition to thrive.

One good rule of thumb: don't make drastic changes to your goats' diet all at once. Don't feed them large amounts of new food. Either of these practices can lead to a major digestive upset for your goats. Change their diets slowly, giving the bacteria in their rumen (their first stomach, made for the initial step in the digestion of the plants they eat) time to adjust.

Range: Browsing and Pasturing Goats

large goat pasture with variety of goats with Oregon mountains in background

Treehugger / Dan Amos

Goats are well-known for their ability to pasture on anything from lovely green grass to scrubby woods, where they can eat young trees and hardy shrubs. They are browsers versus grazers (for example, cattle, sheep, and horses are grazing species). For this reason, they are excellent at clearing rough, overgrown land.

Let go of the myth, if you've heard it, that goats make good "lawnmowers." They would prefer to browse if given a choice.

Goats are ruminants, animals who eat plants and digest them through a four-compartment stomach. However, they are more like deer regarding nutrition than they are to sheep or cattle, which eat lots of grass. In fact, goats should not eat a diet of entirely fresh grass.

Hay

farmer with blonde ponytail scoops hay out of old wheelbarrow next to goat fence

Treehugger / Dan Amos

Hay is the main source of nutrients for goats apart from their range. It's what they mostly eat in the winter when they don't have access to the range. Hay can be grass or a legume, like clover or alfalfa.

Each goat needs about two to four pounds of hay per day, minus what they might forage on pasture. Hay can be fed freely, or strictly twice a day.

If a good range isn't available, dry grass hay of a horse quality is acceptable. Goats require additional hay, which is roughage, for their rumen to function properly. The long fiber is necessary for this. The rumen is the first stomach compartment, rich in live bacteria, that begins to digest the fiber. A healthy goat has a large rumen that feels spongy.

Alfalfa hay is also popular for feeding goats and has more protein, vitamins, and minerals than grass hays, typically. It can be a good choice for feeding milkers as it has more calcium as well.

Chaffhaye

horned brown goat sticks face in pink plastic feeder held by kid

Treehugger / Dan Amos

Chaffhaye is made by cutting early alfalfa or grass, chopping it, mixing it with molasses and a probiotic culture called bacillus subtilis and vacuum-packing it. The hay ferments in the container, adding beneficial bacteria for the goats' rumens. Chaffhaye can be fed as a hay alternative, with more nutrient density than hay. One 50-pound bag of chaffhaye equals roughly 85 to 100 lb of hay.

Grain Feed

goat farmer dumps green food pellets into blue plastic bucket for feeding

Treehugger / Dan Amos

Grain feed or pelleted grain mix can add protein, vitamins, and minerals to your goats' diet. Most farmers supplement with grain feed when necessary—such as does who are raising multiple kids or in bad weather—but foraging and browsing is the foundation of good goat nutrition. Grain should not be overfed: it can make goats fat, cause illness and even death.

Some goat farmers like to have a livestock nutritionist formulate a goat pellet for use when supplements are needed. The local livestock nutritionist can tailor the feed to your area conditions, minimizing problems. You can also have your hay tested to add to the information that your livestock nutritionist will use for formulating this feed.

Minerals

brown and tan goats eat mineral supplements from dusty farm bowl

Treehugger / Dan Amos

Loose minerals formulated for goats should be offered free choice. Feed minerals individually, not in blocks that contain combinations of them.

Kitchen and Garden Scraps

brown goat with horns eats loose pink apples on ground near wire fence

Treehugger / Dan Amos

Goats will do fine eating your compost, for the most part. Egg shells can be problematic, but most other basic kitchen and garden compost is fine for goats as long as they're used to it.

Raisins and corn chips, just a few, or a slice of bread, make nice "treats" for goats but don't overdo them.

Feeding Equipment

goats stand up on hind legs to eat hay out of metal raised container in pasture

Treehugger / Dan Amos

You will also need some equipment for feeding your goats. Nothing fancy, but storing hay in a manger will help goats access it and waste less. And food containers or buckets will also help reduce waste. Metal or plastic feed storage containers with tight-fitting lids will keep pests out of your feed.

For your goats you may need:

  • Feed storage containers
  • Food buckets
  • Water buckets
  • Hay manger
  • Mineral feeder

Water

water streams out of blue metal pipe on outdoor farm for goats

Treehugger / Dan Amos

Of course, your goats need access to fresh, clean water at all times. You may want to raise your water bucket off the ground onto a platform or in an old tire, so it's less likely to get kicked over or pooped in. In winter, you will need to use a water heater so that your goats' water isn't freezing cold and doesn't turn to ice.

View Article Sources
  1. Kerr, Susan, et al. “Living on the Land: Getting Started with Sheep and Goats: Nutrition and Feeding.” Oregon State University.

  2. Kimball, Cheryl. The Field Guide to Goats. Voyageur Press. 2009.

  3. Green, Lisle R., et al. “Using Goats to Control Brush Regrowth on Fuel breaks.” U.S. Department of Agriculture.

  4. Cannas, Antonello. “How Can Nutrition Models Increase the Production Efficiency of Sheep and Goat Operations?Anim Front, vol. 9, 2019, pp. 33-44.,  doi:10.1093/af/vfz005

  5. Holmstrom, Anne. “The Market Goat Guide to Success.” Oregon State University.

  6. Childs, Laura. The Joy of Keeping Goats. Skyhorse. 2011.

  7. Understanding the Ruminant Animal Digestive System.” Michigan State University.

  8. Feeding Grass vs Alfalfa Hay.” Equine Medical Service.

  9. Weaver, Sue. Mini Goats. Fox Chapel Publishing. 2016.