Brissont Spanish Goat Ranch

Brissont Spanish Goat Ranch We are a Spanish Goat Ranch dedicated to the conservation of the Pure Spanish goat breed.
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We are members of the American Spanish Goat Association and are a gathering site to find your needs from several breeders in the SE USA We are a Natural, NON GMO Farm raising Crops, Bees, Fowl, Rabbits, Pure Spanish Meat and Dairy Goats, LGDs and products deriving from those resources.

12/22/2025

Avoiding Greenwashed Genetics: How to Match Genetics With Your Program

Livestock buyers hear the same marketing words everywhere … pasture-raised, forage-only, grass-fed, no grain, hardy, easy-keeper.
But those same terms can describe wildly different management systems, depending on pasture quality, acreage, stocking rate, environment, and breeder goals. One producer’s “pasture-raised” might mean hundreds of acres of native grass, while another’s might mean 50 head on 10 acres with supplemental feeding.

Most buyers simply want an animal that can stay sound, grow reasonably, breed on time, and hold condition on whatever forage their own land provides. The best way to make that match is through transparency, because when breeders explain how and why they feed the way they do, buyers can decide whether those genetics will work at home.

Transparency builds trust, and trust builds repeat buyers.

PASTURE-RAISED:
What people assume: livestock on grass with minimal help.
Reality can be: Lush legumes, irrigated pasture, sheep that graze by day and get heavy alfalffa or grain at night.

FORAGE-BASED / FORAGE-ONLY:
What people assume: Grass, hay, browse.
Reality can be: Dairy-quality alfalfa, almond hulls, baleage, or high-calorie forage blends that act just like grain w no or limited access to pasture.

GRASS-FED / GRASS-ONLY:
What people assume: Simple grass pasture.
Reality can be: cover crops, brassicas, legumes, dairy quality alfalfa.

NO GRAIN:
What people assume: Natural, low-input growth.
Reality can be: Calories from tubs, pellets, alfalfa, or hulls, nothing technically labeled as “grain.”

HARDY / EASY-KEEPER
What people assume: Thrives anywhere with minimal input.
Reality can be: They looked great on one system but may not have faced drought, low-quality forage, parasites, or harsh winters.

Supplementing doesn’t necessarily mean weakness or coddling. Just like athletes need enough protein to build muscle, livestock need adequate nutrients to express their genetics, milk well, breed on time, and stay healthy, especially in operations where:
• pasture quality is thin, drought-stressed, or winter-killed
• producers have limited acreage or inconsistent access to pasture
• grass growth can’t keep up with stocking rate
• parasite seasons are heavy
• maiden females need to reach proper frame size for early breeding
• weather extremes reduce forage availability

Many operations don’t have unlimited acres of mixed grasses. It’s unrealistic (and unprofitable) to let animals fall apart just to say they weren’t supplemented.

Responsible supplementation supports animal health, productivity, and the producer’s bottom line.
Coddling is when everything gets fed so well that the weak ones never show themselves, whether that weakness is structural, metabolic, or just poor doers.

There’s a sweet spot between feeding enough for health and not feeding so much that you hide genetic weakness. The goal is livestock that stay productive on your forage, with supplementation as a tool, not a crutch.

***Understand the Breeder’s Goals

You might want hardy, low-input grass based stock.
Someone else may want the fastest gain possible in a feed-rich system. Both are valid, and both types have a place, if they match your goals.

One of the best questions a buyer can ask is:
“What kind of stock are you trying to produce long-term?” Goal alignment matters more than any label.

Six Questions Every Buyer Should Ask:

1. What were they actually eating from birth to now?
Grass, hay, cover crop, grain, alfalfa, pellets, whatever it was.

2. What made you choose that feeding program?
Pasture quality, acreage, drought, winter, stocking rate, or growth goals.

3. What does your pasture look like through the year?
Native grass, legumes, dry lot, rotational grazing, small acreage, or mixed systems.

4. How do they hold up when feed quality drops?
Do they maintain, melt, or stay productive?

5. What pressures do they face in your environment?
Parasites, heat, cold, thin pasture, limited acreage, or heavy rotation.

6. What type of stock are you trying to produce long-term? Low-input hardy? Fast gain? Maternal? Muscular? Balanced?

Everyone’s goals and management styles are different, and that’s exactly how it should be. Ask what the stock were actually raised on, understand why, and choose genetics that match your pasture, your goals, and your environment. Doing that sets you up for long-term success.

12/16/2025

Good morning! Wake up! warm up! ❤️

12/16/2025
12/16/2025

Did you know baby goats can lose ear tips to frostbite in just minutes?

Winter kidding requires planning, vigilance, and the right supplies—because goats aren’t built like calves or lambs. In this article, I break down exactly how to prepare for kidding in freezing temperatures and how to keep newborn kids alive and thriving.

👉 Article link in the comments!

12/16/2025

“You want HOW much for a ¼ cow?!”

Let’s break it down.

A beef calf right now, at 400 lbs, is running about $4.00/lb.
That’s $1,600 right out of the gate.

Now we feed that calf for roughly a year.
Even at a cheap all-stock feed — $12 per 50-lb bag — and averaging 3 lbs/day, you’re looking at around $300 in feed. But when you’re feeding more, or higher quality feed - keep packing on the cost.

So now we’re at $1,900, assuming:
• it grows on schedule
• doesn’t need extra time
• doesn’t get sick
• nothing goes wrong

But wait… you forgot hay.

Hay math (because cows don’t live on air):
• Avg weight during grow-out: ~800 lbs
• Intake: 2.5% of body weight
• That’s ~20 lbs of dry matter/day
• With hay at ~90% dry matter → ~22 lbs as-fed
• About half the diet as hay → ~11 lbs/day
• Over 365 days = ~4,000 lbs of hay

That’s roughly 3–5 round bales, depending on size and waste.
At $40 per bale, add another $120–$200.

So now we’re well over $2,000 — and we haven’t even talked about the butcher.

Processing isn’t cheap either:
• $1.75 per hanging pound
• Plus a dispatch/kill fee

And finally — let’s be real —
Farmers aren’t doing this for fun or boredom.
This is labor, land, feed, time, equipment, and risk.
We have families to feed too.

So when you see the price for a ¼, ½, or whole cow, maybe skip the snide remarks.

👉 You’re getting:
• A freezer full of beef
• Raised with care
• No mystery meat
• No supply chain games
• And you know exactly where it came from

That peace of mind?
It has value.

Address

300 JAMIE Lane
Sneedville, TN
37869

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We are a Natural Farm and Spanish Goat Ranch with both Dairy and Spanish Meat Goats available