Goats are used to provide
milk and specialty wools, and as meat and
goatskin. Some
charities provide goats to
impoverished people in poor countries, in the belief that having useful things alleviates poverty better than cash. The cost of obtaining goats and then distributing them can however be high.
Meat The taste of goat kid meat is similar to that of
spring lamb meat; in fact, in the English-speaking islands of the
Caribbean, and in
South Asia, the word '
mutton' denotes both goat and sheep meat. However, some compare the taste of goat meat to
veal or
venison, depending on the age and condition of the goat. Its flavor is said to be primarily linked to the presence of 4-methyl
octanoic and 4-methyl
nonanoic acid. The meat is made into dishes such as
goat curry,
mutton satay, and
capra e fagioli.
Milk, butter, and cheese Goats produce about 2% of the world's total annual milk supply. Dairy goats produce an average of of milk during an average 284-day
lactation. The milk can contain between around 3.5% and 5%
butterfat according to breed. Goat milk is processed into products including
cheese and
Dulce de leche.
Mohair and cashmere wool Most goats have soft insulating hairs nearer the skin, and long
guard hairs on the surface. The soft hairs are the ones valued by the
textile industry; the material goes by names such as down,
cashmere and
pashmina. The coarse guard hairs are of little value as they are too coarse and difficult to spin and dye. The
cashmere goat produces a commercial quantity of fine and soft
cashmere wool, one of the most expensive natural fibers commercially produced. It is harvested once a year. The Angora breed of goats produces long, curling, lustrous locks of
mohair. The entire body of the goat is covered with mohair and there are no guard hairs. The locks constantly grow to four inches or more in length. Angora crossbreeds, such as the
pygora and the
nigora, have been created to produce mohair and/or cashgora on a smaller, easier-to-manage animal. The wool is
shorn twice a year, with an average yield of about .
Land clearing method to clear invasive weeds during
Earth Day 2010. Goats have been used by humans to clear unwanted vegetation for centuries. They have been described as "eating machines" and "biological control agents". There has been a resurgence of this in North America since 1990, when herds were used to clear dry brush from California hillsides thought to be endangered by potential wildfires. This form of using goats to clear land is sometimes known as
conservation grazing. Since then, numerous public and private agencies have hired private herds from companies such as
Rent A Goat to perform similar tasks. This may be expensive and their smell may be a nuisance. This practice has become popular in the
Pacific Northwest, where they are used to remove invasive species not easily removed by humans, including (thorned) blackberry vines and
poison oak. Chattanooga, TN and Spartanburg, SC have used goats to control
kudzu, an invasive plant species prevalent in the southeastern United States.
Medical training Some countries' militaries use goats to train
combat medics. In the United States, goats have become the main animal species used for this purpose after the Pentagon phased out using dogs for medical training in the 1980s. While modern
mannequins used in medical training are quite efficient in simulating the behavior of a human body, trainees feel that "the goat exercise provide[s] a sense of urgency that only real life trauma can provide". The practice has elicited outcry from
animal-rights groups.
Pets Some people choose goats as a pet because of their ability to form close bonds with their human guardians. Goats are
social animals and usually prefer the company of other goats, but because of their herd mentality, they will follow their owner and form close bonds with them, hence their continuing popularity. Goats generally either inherit certain feeding preferences or learn them after birth. File:Boerbok.jpg|The
Boer goat, a meat breed File:Curry Goat and Rice.jpg|
Goat curry and rice at the
Notting Hill Carnival File:Mauritanian bota bag (cropped).jpg|
Goatskin water container in Mauritania File:Goat milking on an organic farm in Israel.jpg|A goat being milked by machine File:Chabichou2.JPG|
Chabichou, a French
goat cheese File:Angora 001.jpg|
Angora goat with long coat of
mohair File:Duet mohair wool beret.jpg|A
mohair wool
beret File:Goats in landscape management at German Highway B 42. Spielvogel 2013.jpg|Goats managing a German motorway embankment File:Capra hircus & Homo sapiens (55026684731).jpg|Goat being petted at
Copenhagen Zoo's
children's zoo == In culture ==