Saturday, June 19, 2021

Getting Ready for the Goats

 My son, maybe with a little tongue in cheek, told us he was buying us goats.  My hubby had always said that he would like to have some goats to milk, but we have never really had a place to raise them.  So since we have a few acres here, he thought now would be a great time.  

Here was the problem.  We have no fences.  We have no barn.  We have no money.  So we started small and kept working on it.  First the barn.  We are getting three goats, two does and a buck.  They are just babies right now but we had to think about our future....and theirs.  So we designed a 15 foot by 15 foot goat barn.. It is taller in the front, and slopes to the back.  It can easily be divided into stalls and even an area for milking.  We looked at lumber but it was sooooooo expensive so we economized where we could.  The uprights are actually logged from the property.  They are oak trees that were taken from places where they were either too bunched up or bent over.  We cut them, trimmed them, and set them in concrete.  

We bought inexpensive sheathing for the sides and corrugated fiberglass for the roof.

We have an old concrete mixer that we purchased over 30 years ago.  We have moved it from Arizona to Colorado, and now to Missouri.  We used it to mix the concrete to hold the posts in place.  
We stained it with an inexpensive wood stain in barn red.  It took nearly four gallons.  We are still in the process of finishing the inside and the front.  





Whew!  This was quite the project.  Thankfully we had pretty good weather while we were doing it.  We used lumber from our scrap pile and our neighbor even offered some from his stash.  To place the poles, we used a gas powered auger.  It was supposed to be a one-man machine, but it took one man....and one woman to hold it steady enough.  Our muscles were sore, but not as bad as they might have been if we had dug by hand!
 

                  On to the next project!  A water catchment system.