Every morning he headed to the goat barn calling to them as he carried his milking buckets. They all answered back in unison, bleating and calling to him with their goaty little voices. They propped their split hooves up to the fence and watched as he came close and closer and then they crowded around the gate and made a ring about him as he entered and made his way to the barn. Some of them nibbled on his shirt as he petted them and talked to them.
We all knew GRANDPA LOVED GOATS!
He went around to the back of the barn were the feed was and scooped up small buckets of grain to pour into each stanchion. The goat ladies new exactly what to do and hopped into there places up on the wooden boards and waited. When they got their grain treats they nibbled and stood still while he washed of their udders with warm soapy water from the house and dried them with a cloth. Then the milking began...
All his grand kids loved to help take care of the goats. We learned to milk them and spent lots of time playing with them, especially the new babies.
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MEMORIES FROM JEANNE
This picture was taken when we lived on Harvey Lane in Paradise California. Grandpa built a small, one room cabin and little
goat barn. The white Saanen goat's name was "Elsie" and the
black Nubian was "Blackie." We loved to play with the goats in the goat
pen and used to jump barefoot, off the barn roof onto a big pile of
manure, stacked up from cleaning goat beans out of the barn.
Yes,
Grandpa Davis loved goats! When he and grandma first got married, in
September of 1940, they lived on grandma Hamburgh's ranch, in Raymond, California. Grandpa tried to make a living with his goat dairy of around a
hundred goats. This is where they still lived when I was born in August
of 1941. It was during WWII when things were financially rough for
everybody.
They moved to Mt. Shasta, Calif....to be near Uncle
Herman and Uncle Ray, his brothers,.....and work in the timber.
This
is where auntie Faith was born in December of 1942 in a nearby hospital
in Weed Ca.
Of course grandpa still had a couple nanny goats and a huge white Saanen billy goat, he named Shagnasty.
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| Grandpa and another Saanen billy goat years later - Oakhurst |
One
morning we heard wild shouts in the goat pen. Grandma came running out
of the house to find grandpa dangling from a tree limb, where Shagnasty
was furiously ramming him with his horns, while grandpa yelled and
kicked at him with his cork logging boats. I can remember grandma
grabbing a heavy garden rake and coming down on his head over and over,
until he finally decided to run off with what was left of his brains.
That was the only ornery billy goat that grandpa ever had. All others were very gentle and safe for us kids to be around.
He
had to sell his goats when they moved to Idaho and rented a small
house, while Auntie Faith was still a small baby. She was very thin and
cried a lot. Grandma didn't seem to have enough milk to nurse her
properly. Grandpa knew just how to fix that problem. He brought home a
nice milk goat. They kept it hid in the bath tub until grandpa could get
a pen fixed.
Auntie Faith thrived on the goat milk and
became healthy again. I can still remember them filling a baby bottle and
pulling the rubber nipple onto the top.
Oakhurst, 1975
MEMORIES FROM DANELLA
As a child we only drank goats milk and there was a LOT of it! When I was very small ~ 1971, Grandpa paid me a nickle for every glass of goats milk I drank. He would tell me that "It will put hair on your chest!" He gave me a small, green glass Mentholatum bottle with a screw on lid to keep my nickles in. I carried it around and took the lid off and on and counted my pieces of money. For some reason that eludes me now, having hair on my chest was the next best thing to goats milk.
Grandpa and Cheyenne - In the goat barn (~ 1987)
























