Judging Breeding Goats in Tennessee Ricky C. Skillington, Central Region Goat Specialist, University of Tennessee Extension

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Judging Breeding Goats in Tennessee Ricky C. Skillington, Central Region Goat Specialist, University of Tennessee Extension When evaluating animals for breeding traits and determining which are to be selected, you must utilize several different standards for the visual appraisal. Breeding goats are no different than any other specie of animal. Livestock producers have the advantage to weigh the visual appraisal against pedigree information and performance data. We must, in youth judging, use only visual appraisal for the selection of the attributes that we consider valuable. The information in this fact sheet can be used when judging any breeding goat. Most of the classes used in youth judging contests in Tennessee will be Boer and Boer crosses. The information in this fact sheet will be mainly aimed at these animals. When judging other meat breeds, there is information on specific breed characteristics found on these breed s web sites. This information will be valuable when judging these breeds. For any type of breeding goat evaluation, there are four general areas which must be addressed in the evaluation and selection process. These are: 1). Structural Soundness, 2). Skeletal Dimension, 3). Muscularity, and 4). Eye Appeal. It doesn t matter whether you are judging purebred registered animals or commercial; bucks or does, these attributes must be considered for every animal. Structural Soundness Structural Soundness is listed first for a very good reason. The structure of any animal is the foundation of that animal. Everything which is added must be built upon a sound structural foundation. Judges will start judging animals by evaluating different parts when talking about structure; I will start at the head. Since we are talking about correctness, the eye and ear must be sound. A goat that cannot see will not perform well and this defect should be used to greatly discount this goat. In the same manner, a goat that can not hear will not usually perform as needed and this should be used as a discount also. In most judging contests, you will usually be told to assume that the goat is sound in both eye and ear. When evaluating a goat for your herd, you should never assume these items are sound unless you have evaluated them for yourself. The jaw of a goat should be evenly opposed so that the teeth touch the dental pad when the goat s mouth is closed. There are all kinds of variations on this anatomical makeup of goats. Some breed standards allow the goat to have a slight under or over bite. Youth judges must realize that this part of the goat must work correctly if the goat is to survive and thrive. Progressing to the neck and shoulders area, the animal must have a strong neck that is balanced in length to the body and blends in well into the shoulders. The neck should come off of the top of the shoulders and not be low set. This high neck set will cause the goat to keeps its head up and be alert. Animals that are more alert and upheaded are usually more healthy and thrifty. As we progress to the top of the shoulders and the topline of the goat, we need to see a strong topped goat. The topline should be relatively level from the shoulder/neck junction to the hip bones or hooks. It is an

advantage if there is a slight drop from the withers to the hooks. Dips or roaches in the topline is a major indication of a weakness and needs to carry a major criticism when judging. The hip of a goat should be nominally level and not too steep. Steep rumps are generally the starting place for unsound rear legs. Speaking of legs, they should be on the corners of the body and be strong. Pasterns should be strong and have enough flex to allow the goat to move freely. The pastern should also be relatively short in length and not be too straight. When viewing a goat from the rear, the real legs should be perpendicular to the ground. When viewing from the side, a vertical line from the pins should follow the rear leg to the ground. Anything other than that should receive criticism. When viewing the front legs of a goat, the front legs should be perpendicular to the ground. The hooves should point straight forward as the animals sets its foot on the ground. Hooves which turn in or out or splay toes should be considered as a criticism. When viewing the animal from the rear, the base of the animal s tail must be centered and straight. The rest of the tail should curve upward in a natural position. When dealing with breeding animals, one must pay close attention to the reproduction organs of the animal. The buck should have two large well-formed equal sized testes in a single scrotum. Occasionally bucks will exhibit halving in the scrotum area. The scrotum must not a split in it more than 2 inches and no split is desirable. The external genetalia of the female should be well developed and properly structured. Infantile vulvas and vulvas that turn up are indicators of poor fertility in does. These can also be an indication of a hermaphrodite. When surveying the structure soundness of a breeding doe, one must assess the structure of the udder and teats on that animal. Does should have a well formed udder that has strong attachments and the number of functional teats not to exceed two per side. Cluster teats and fishtail teats are definite faults and these animals must be strongly criticized and moved to the lower part of a class. A split teat with two distinctly separated teats and openings with at least 50% of the body of the teat separated is permissible, but teats without splits are preferred. When evaluating bucks, one must also look at the teat structure of bucks. A buck with bad teat structure will pass this on to its female offspring and discounts should be made on these structures in the same manner as what was done with breeding does. Skeletal Dimension The next important area of evaluation is Skeletal Dimension. Once again, I will start with the head and proceed down the body. The size of the skull is a good indicator of overall skeletal dimension. Breeding goats should have a prominent, strong head. The width between the eyes and the horns indicates a stoutness of skeleton. The length of the head is an indicator of growth. It is always very proportional to the length of the rump and other skeleton areas. The forehead should be prominent on Boer and Boer cross goats. The sex of the animal will dictate the appearance of the animal in the head. Bucks should a have a masculine appearance and does must exhibit a feminine appearance.

Progressing to the neck, the length of neck is also an excellent indicator of growth. A long clean neck that has balance is also an indicator of the length of body. The length of neck and length of body has a major influence on the overall dimension of a goat. The overall dimension of any animal is three dimensional length, width, and depth. The length of body needs to be balanced with the depth of body. An open rib which is well sprung off of the topline of the animal is necessary for breeding animals. This openness of rib allows plenty of room for internal organs and offspring which are to be produced. Breeding animals must have a deep body in the chest that carries out into the rear flank. Breeding goats need to have a broad, long rump that has a gentle slope to the pins. The length and depth of any animal must be balanced with the width. When observed from the front, the floor of the chest should be wide. This area must be balanced without being coarse or opened fronted. When evaluating an animal from the rear, the animal must show width in the rib and middle portion of the body and width between the rear legs. While length of leg is usually not addressed by many breeds, balance of the animal is the key. As a general rule, the depth of body of any breeding animal should be about 60% of the total height on the animal. Legs that are too short will hinder the animal s ability to cover large amounts terrain and legs that are too long offer little merit either. Once again, balance is the key. The bone in the leg of a goat should be large and flat. The foot should be large and sound and dark colored hooves are almost always sounder that light colored hooves. Muscle While structure and dimension are the essential foundation of a goat, the reason for this animal is the production of an edible product called red meat. This red meat is called muscle. While we started with the head and move back and down to evaluate the two previous area, now we will start ground-up and rump forward. Muscling is apparent everywhere on the skeleton. However, a good evaluator selects certain areas to asses the amount of muscle present. One of the easiest places to evaluate the amount of muscle in a goat is to view this animal from the rear. The thickest place on a well muscled goat should be from stifle to stifle while the goat is on the move or standing naturally. It is also advantageous to evaluate the muscle development on the inside and outside portion of the leg and to see how far the goat carries muscle down to the hock. A visual examination of the thickness of the top of a goat is also a good indicator. It is easy for the inexperienced eye to be fooled by fat when using only the loin and rack to evaluate muscle on a goat. Body condition can influence the thickness of a goat in certain areas. Probably the best indicator of true muscle in a goat is in the forearm. The muscle in the forearm of a goat is directly proportional to the longisimus dorsi muscle which extends the length of the topline. The more muscle that a goat has, the more salable product a producer has produced.

Eye Appeal Eye appeal is the final attribute that must be considered when evaluating goats. Its importance must never be underestimated. Balance and symmetry in the ways all of the animal s parts fit together is the most important factor in eye appeal. When selecting females, they should be feminine in their appearance with clean fronts with feminine heads. They should show feminine angularity such that the animal appears up fronted and the depth of body should increase into the region of the rear flanks. Bucks, on the other hand, should express a masculine appearance. They should possess a rugged appearance throughout, especially in the head and neck area. They must have a rugged bold spring of rib to carry the respiratory system. This is essential for them to survive during the stress to their body during the peak of rut and breeding season. They should have plenty of muscle throughout since they will provide one-half of the genetics of all the offspring in the herd. Loose supple skin is desirable in breeding goats. If judging registered goats, color is also important, but I will not try to go into that with this information. Records and pedigrees are very important when selecting breeding and replacement animals, but this information is currently not being used in judging in Tennessee Youth Judging activities. Terminology Structural Correctness More correct bite Mouth is out Larger testicles Parrot Mouthed More functional udder Monkey Mouthed More desirable size/number of teats Small Testicles More structural correct on feet and legs Udder problems indicated by: Tracks wider and truer in front/rear Weak top Squarer on feet and legs Weak/down in the pasterns Truer tracking Hocks in/cow hocked Exhibits more style and erectness when traveling Splays out/toes out in front More desirable slope of shoulder Steep rumped More angle to shoulder Short hipped/rump More correct /desirable set to pastern Short bodies Longer, freer striding Post legged More fluid/flexible stride Sickle hocked Neck blends more smoothly into shoulders Restricted in movement Shoulder blades set tighter against chest wall Straight shouldered Smoother, cleaner through shoulders Short, tight strides off both ends Stronger, more level top More nearly level from hooks to pins Straighter/stronger/more correct in the foreleg when viewed from the side

More width between the fore/rear legs Legs placed more squarely under body Growth Potential Larger framed Larger, growthier More size and scale Greater length and extension through front end More future growth and outcome Appears to be faster growing Higher weight per day of age Smaller framed Less future and outcome Earlier maturing Quicker patterned Lower weight per day of age Body Capacity or Volume More capacious Higher volume More overall dimension and capacity Longer, deeper bodied Wider chested Bolder sprung Broad through the chest floor More spring of rib Deeper and more expandable in the rib More circumference of heart Deeper in the hearth girth More substance of bone Longer bodied/loin/rump Deeper ribbed Muscle Heavier muscled More expressively muscled More volume of muscle More natural thickness Thicker topped More muscle expression in shoulder/forearm loin/rump/leg Thicker in loin/lower leg Meatier topped Wider from stifle to stifle Thicker, squarer rump/hip Deeper through the twist Tighter ribbed Narrow gauged Narrow chested Shallow bodied Constricted in the fore rib Narrow through the chest floor Lacks volume/depth/capacity Slab sided Lacks spring of rib Pinched behind the shoulders Sharp through the rack Frail Short bodied/loin/rump Lighter muscled Flat legged Flat/narrow loin Tapered into lower leg Tapers from hooks to pins Narrow tracking Narrow chested

More uniform width from hooks to pins Wider tracking Wider chested More forearm muscling More style and balance More stylish Cleaner patterned Nicer balanced More eye appealing Nicer profiling Smoother More level top/hip/rump Squarer hip/rump Eye Appeal/Balance Coarse Weak topped Ill made Poorly balanced Steep hipped/rumped Femininity Exhibits more feminine wedge More femininity through head, neck, and shoulder More angular fronted Longer, cleaner necked Smoother blending through the front end Blends smoother through neck-shoulder junction Blends smoother from shoulder to fore rib Lacks femininity Coarse fronted Coarse shouldered Short necked Too masculine Wasty fronted More rugged More masculine More testicular development Cleaner fronted Masculinity Refined Frail Small testicles Too feminine Coarse fronted Wasty fronted Adapted from the American Boer Goat Association Selection and Evaluation by Preston Faris and Dr. Frank Craddock