Black Mesa Ranch

Snowflake, Arizona, USA

Artisan Cheese

Nubian Goats

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Updated!

6/07: We have revamped our Ranch Workshop Packages!

In addition to our one and three-day cheese making and goat management workshops learn about our free open- house days and lodging accommodations.

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Award Winning Artisan Goat Cheeses

4 Awards 2005 ADGA National Competition

3 Awards 2004 ADGA National  Competition

 

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Award Winning Fine Candies

(available seasonally)

2 Awards 2005 ADGA National Competition

2 Awards 2004 ADGA National Competition

 

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Click here to read the online version of Kathryn's booklet

Getting Started

The RIGHT WAY

With Goats 

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This site last updated:

May 28, 2008

 © 2000-2008 Black Mesa Ranch Inc. All Rights Reserved

Arizona Grown!

 

Black Mesa Ranch
Snowflake Arizona

Nubian Dairy Goats at BMR

Bucks, Does, Wethers and Kids

The Primary Focus of our Operation

 

Jump to 2007-2008 Breeding schedule

Jump to  Dairy Goat Lineage Page

Jump to What about Wethers?

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All About Our Goats

We got our first Nubian dairy goats in early 2001 with the idea of having a bit of milk for family consumption and maybe even enough for some personal cheese-making.  Our love for these intelligent and funny creatures as well as our growing appreciation for the superb quality of dairy products they allowed us to make prompted our decision to pursue starting up a certified Grade "A" goat dairy not long thereafter.  We, only half-jokingly, say that we just started the dairy to help support our "goat habit".  Click here to jump to the page detailing our Dairy Project work.

These fine animals continue to be the focal point of our ranch businesses and the lynch-pin of our dairy operation, but the truth remains that we still operate our little dairy so that we can keep enjoying the goats - not the other way around - an important distinction that helps promote the well being of our herd and a guiding premise that allows us to keep the "Art" in our Artisan cheese-making.  Come learn more about our Artisan Dairy Operation by clicking here.

From the beginning we decided to get the very best animals we could find and opted for a 100% registered Nubian herd.  Nubians, recognizable by their typically long, dangly ears and Roman noses, are an especially good choice for cheese-making operations as their milk (while not as voluminous as some breeds) is the richest and highest in fat content.  We also have found Nubians a perfect breed for our Arizona climate.  Summers here in northern Arizona, even at nearly 6000' elevation, can get pretty hot and the Nubians seem to be well adapted for the heat. 

Our goats are a particularly sturdy and healthy bunch, in part due to their excellent genetics but more largely thanks to their open-range habitat and access to superior browse, lots of sunshine and fresh high-desert mountain air.  We do disbud (de-horn) all of our goats a few days after birth.  Please see our Disbudding Page for details and photos on this process, if you are interested.

While the number of goats we have here at any one time varies as some get sold and lots get born, we endeavor to keep the number small.  Our Dairy plans and goals are based on an eventual cap of 20-24 milkers during full production.  In addition to the production does we will also likely have a number of maiden does we are bringing up as replacements, some in-milk does we are offering for sale and, perhaps a few older, retired does with no responsibilities at all except to browse contentedly around the ranch 'til the end of their days.

 

Kids, kids, and more kids!

Originally, all our does (affectionately known simply as 'The Girls") and kids lived in a spacious "habitat" featuring a converted 40' mobile home and a 16' travel trailer shell which served as their evening and foul-weather shelters.  The mobile home also housed a heated wash room and a hay storeroom.  There was a nice big pile of black mesa rocks in their yard and some old cedar logs for them to play on.  This has all changed!   January 1, 2004 we broke ground for our new 1500 sq ft goat barn!  By mid-February the does and kids had moved themselves in - an obvious sign of their approval!  For more info and pictures on our original  development of the doe's habitat click this link to the Goat House Project.  For pictures of the new barn being built click here

We also keep bucks here for our breeding program. Only outstanding bucks from some of the best genetic lines get to stay and "work" here. Our boys live in a separate, building and enclosure from the rest of the  herd. Click here for lots of pix of the Buckland development.  We are also investigating Artificial Insemination as a means of achieving further herd improvements by extending our breeding efforts in the future.

 

Nubian Buck "Rio" with Buckling "Zane"

And, of course, there are the wethers (castrated bucks) - the clowns and chief trouble-makers of the bunch.  The few wethers we keep around earn their treats through their entertainment value mostly, but we also train them for light packing duties (with saddles and panniers).  The wethers fast growth and large size make them perfect for doing a little work from time to time.  Very occasionally, we will also have a wether or two that make it to our freezer - it's a delicious lean protein source and we feel that if we're going to eat red meat it should, quite naturally, be from our own healthy, well cared for animals.

   

Wether "Ordono"

In addition to their own free-range browsing schedule, the goats really enjoy joining our regular little morning walks on the property or up the mesa where we all (including all the dogs and whole goat herd minus the bucks) generally put on a mile or so before heading home to work on the various tasks of the day.  It's quite a sight when even the few-day-old kids tag along!

    

The goat gang takes Kathryn on a walk

Herd News:

BMR Sets "G6S Normal" Herd Goals

Genetic testing done to screen for defect.  Herd results: Very Good!

   8/19/05 Known in some circles as "That Dirty Little Nubian Goat Secret”, there is a rather recently discovered genetic defect that Nubians and Nubian crosses can have. It is referred to, more formally, as the "G6S defect" (in reference to the enzyme not produced as the result of  the defect).

Nubian goats with the defect can be either "G6S affected" (in which case they fail to thrive and usually die at a very young age), or they can be "G6S carriers" (in which case they grow and live normally but can pass it on to their offspring).  Goats without any abnormality (as can only be determined by a DNA test) are said to be "G6S Normal".  The offspring of a  "carrier" buck and a "carrier" doe will have 25% chance of being affected, 50% chance of being a carrier, and only a 25% chance of being normal.  Up to 25% of all Nubians goats are thought to be carriers of this defect.

This spring we began ordering genetic testing on all new goats coming into our herd to make sure they were G6S normal. 

The happy BMR herd browses contentedly (8/05)

This summer we extended the commitment and began testing the rest of our permanent herd for the defect. 28 more goats were tested and to our great relief only 2 does we were planning on keeping came back as being carriers. The rest were all normal!!  Beginning with the 2006 season we will be able to guarantee most of the kids we sell as G6S normal. By the end of 2006 we expect our herd to be 100% G6S Normal.

For more information on G6S, please refer to: http://www.goatworld.com/articles/g6s.shtml

To meet the whole goat gang and for much more in-depth information on them please visit our Lineage Pages

Nubian goats at Black Mesa Ranch, Snowflake Arizona, USA

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