Navajo-Angora goats are just about as rare as can be at this point. They no longer have a breed registry and I know of only myself and a handful of other people that are not of the Navajo Nation that raise them.I have never heard of Navajo-Angora goats or Navajo goats for that matter. It looks so soft! Is that a good mix for wool? What are the Navajo goats like? How do you like the wool from the rabbits vs the goats?
@MuddyFarms That was the reason I went to the Navajo-Angora vs just the standard commerical type Angora. I wanted a breed that was most suitably adapted to our bit of rough and tumble climate. When it's 110 degrees out, any little bit helps, so if a clean face allows better heat exchange, great. If their rumen can convert more calories from mesquite leaves or Cholla cactus bits, so be it.
I'm always interested in what the Livestrock Conservancy is working on. Unfortunately I like fiber animals, and they are not traditionally raised in the southwest. The insulating factor from that natural fiber was developed in much colder areas. However we do have the Navajo-Churro and the Navajo-Angora, and thats because the four corners area, a place of high desert is hot during the day and cold at night, so it could sustain the need for a fiber animal.
The southwest is all about cotton for fiber, and I love the local cottons that thrive in the desert. But, despite the benefits of cotton, its just never very cute!
@MuddyFarms I believe all goats are browsers and not grazers. They would rather have a field of brush and trees than of grass. They're closely related to deer.
Is there a lot of maintenance on those goats? Do you need to shear them like sheep?
Liz
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