Stud Services

 When you are ready for that kid, and the delicious milk that follows (for at least a year)contact us and we will add you to the calendar.

When you and your doe arrive, she will be placed in the pen with the stud of your choice and be fed and bed with him until you pick her up.

$100.00 Stud Fee Per doe ($75 per doe for two or more does at a time) Due upon arrival.

The stud fee includes up to 5 days of boarding.  (If special diet is desired for your doe, you would be responsible for supplying the feed for such 
a diet, at the same rate)

Any time beyond 5 days will be at the cost of $5.00 per doe, per day, for doe care (Feed, Water, Boarding. )

We do not have livestock transportion available, so you are responsible for dropping off and picking up your Doe/s.  We do not allow our bucks to be picked up and taken to the Doe/s.

All does must be vaccinated for CAE.

All does that are brought for service must have collars.

Does must be in healthy and have their hooves trimmed.

For the proud papa’s.Stud Munchkins would love to have information and pictures of the kids, sired by our studs.

You will be contacted daily via text or phone with updates on your doe.

Should your does become sick while in the care of Stud Munchkins, you will be contacted immediately. Should you not be available and veterinarian services be necessary, the owner will be responsible for all expenses incurred for care. Should your doe expire while in custody of Stud Munchkins, Stud Munchkins will not be held responsible, unless malicious neglect or negligence is found to be evident as sole cause of the does death.

Any additional fees incurred during the breeding stay of the doe will be paid in full, prior to the doe being released to her owner.

Any doe left behind beyond the agreement terms, and or, more than 60 days will be considered abandoned and will become property of Stud Munchkins.

Contact:

432-770-3616

Studmunchkinstx@gmail.com

Bucks are…YUCK

When that adorable little kid is born, with male anatomy, it is hard to imagine, someday, if you don’t clip that anatomy, he will be disgustingly smelly and most annoying in a overly ‘friendly’ way.

Bucks stink most of the time, a musky dirty smell. They have scent(stink) glands behind their horns. Bucks are REALLY are putrid stinky during rut, musky x10. Unlike dogs and cats who spread their smell by peeing on things, goats think the best source of spreading is from their head. And they don’t just spread the musky x10 stink. They add to it, with pee. They pee on their own heads and faces and mouths, then rub their heads, with all that cologne, what ever they can. One of my bucks likes to rub his head on my calf as I add water or feed or stand still for a moment around him.

Rut is like a bucks ‘extra sexy’ time, usually in the fall season. The best time for goats to breed to have kids in the spring- Nature is cool how it works that out. Unless, the goats are Nigerian and they will cycle every month, instead of seasonally. So year round stink, for Nigerian dwarf bucks, if there are does in heat near.

Bucks are also determined. Their one goal in life, is to score. Come hell or high fence. They will climb or crawl through razor blades if necessary to get to that tail wagging doe. For the few seconds of bliss.

In between ‘stands’ the buck will sniff and prod and harass the does, even when they won’t take them. The buck will pester wethers. The bucks will ram their heads with other bucks for hours, till they stagger and bleed from the horns and head. They chortle like monkeys, pace their pens when a female comes near. They lose all the adorableness of being a cute little kid.

My Nigerian dwarf bucks, in spite of their stinkiness and obsession to ‘get some’ are actually very friendly. They get along with each other for about 30 minutes until they start bashing heads. They beg for pats on the head and want to share their stink regularly with me. When they hear us outside, they call out for attention and a talk. For me having bucks works, except when I feel sorry for them for being cooped up, and needing more action ;).

For most, owning bucks is just not feasible. You have to have room, downwind. You have to keep them separate from the does most of the time. You don’t really get to enjoy the fun of having a Nigerian dwarf goat with a buck. I have them so others can breed their Nigerian Does and have milk and babies, without the hassle of bucks.