Boer goats spotlighted at Oregon show
McMINNVILLE, Ore. — The fact that many were expecting twins didn’t keep nearly 100 top meat goats from congregating at the American Boer Goat Association’s Fall Show and Sale Oct. 1-2 at the Yamhill County Fairgrounds.
South African Boer goats, with their white bodies and red heads, are docile, fertile animals with rapid growth and density of frame.
“About 60 to 70 percent of the world eats goat meat,” Ruth Kilgore, president of the Oregon Meat Goat Producers, said. “With our growing ethnic population, the demand for goat meat in the U.S. exceeds our ability to keep up.” In 2014 the U.S. imported more than 43 million pounds of goat meat, primarily from Australia, for a total value of $94.7 million, according to North Carolina State University.
Before the Boers arrived in the U.S. in 1993 people ate milk goats.
“When people think of goats they think of skinny, bony dairy goats; not the breeds being grown just for the meat and that within five months can provide a 100-pound goat that’s ready to butcher,” Dana Childers of Medford, Ore., said. Her 2-year-old doe ‘Made you Look’ weighs 225 pounds; her males reach about 300 pounds.
With a 4-H beginning, 15-year-old Megan Walton and her older sister Riley started Little Star Farm at their home in Aurora, Ore.
“Goats are popular around the world because they can go in groups; they’re easy to eat because the bone-to-meat ratio is better than cows and they’re easier to keep cool in the heat because of their ears,” Megan Walton said. The care they put into their animals can yield some healthy returns, to which Childers can attest.
“The more that you show and the more that you promote your herd, the more money there is,” said Childers who, with husband Bruce, owns Childers Show Goats. “Artificial insemination can be pretty expensive; you’re looking at about $100 for a single straw, but with the right buck the babies will sell like mad.”
Bruce Childers would like to see goat meat take its rightful place in American refrigerators.
“I think if people tried it and it was prepared properly, it would become a highly consumed meat,” he said. “Goat meat is so much better for you than other red meats and really tastes good if prepared properly. Goat meat would really appeal to people who are health conscious and want meat, if they really knew what it was.”
The word’s getting out, thanks to word-of-mouth Facebook-style.
“Facebook is amazing,” Dana Childers said. “I’ve put goats on there and had them sell within 10 minutes. Websites are great, but the volume of people you can reach in a minute on Facebook is amazing.”
The family goat may also be coming back into vogue.
“A lot of people are getting 5-acre plots now and goats could work very well there because you put five goats where you can put one cow,” Kilgore said. “A family can handle them easily and still have other jobs.”