Publication Date: January 24, 2004
Judging Meat Goats
by
Edmundo E. Martinez, Joe C. Paschal, Frank Craddock, and C. Wayne Hanselka
Criteria As Taken From Texas Agricultural Extension Service Publication No.
B-5018
Selection, Management and Judging of Meat-Type Spanish Goats
(Note: The criteria listed below for market goats differ
somewhat from those by which Boer goats are judged in purebred competition,
because certain characteristics unique to that breed are then considered,
as specified in the Boer Goat Breed Standards which are listed elsewhere at
www.boergoats.com.)
Several criteria should be considered when selecting and judging meat
goats. These include conformation (structural correctness), general appearance
(size and scale, capacity, and depth and width of body), muscling (growth
and weight per day of age) and condition or finish (fatness).
Meat goats should be evaluated on "type" and "market desirability." These
terms refer to frame size, skeletal correctness and how these blend in the
market animal. "Market desirability" relates how much finish the goat has
in relation to its weight, size and age and is sometimes referred to in
terms of USDA quality and yield grades used for lambs.
A good market goat should be rectangular in appearance from the side with
straight, level top and bottom lines. Length of rump, length of body and
length of leg are important to market desirability. The rump should be level
and the overall body shou]d be trim. The legs should be straight and placed
square under the body, not post-legged or cow-hocked. The fore and hind
legs should show evidence of muscling.
From the front, a market goat should show width between the forelegs, muscling
in the forearm and shoulders, trimness in the brisket or breast area and
soundness and correctness in the front feet and legs. The head should be
in proportion to the neck and body.
From the rear, the hindquarter should be muscular and long and the back,
loin and rump should be uniform in width. The feet and legs should be straight
and spaced square and wide under the goat.
GENERAL APPEARANCE
STATURE. The term stature refers to the overall skeletal size and length
of the goat. Goats must have an adequate length of cannon bone from knee
to pastern and should be above average in overall length of body and general
size. Cannon bone length is a good indication of skeletal size. The goat's
height measured at the withers should be slightly more than at the hips,
and bones must be of good size.
HEAD. The head should combine the beauty of eyes, nose, ears, and overall
form with strength and refinement. It should have a balance of length, width
and substance that insures an ability to consume large amounts of forage
with ease.
FRONT END. The front end is a combination of chest and shoulder features.
The goat should have a wide chest floor and prominent brisket with a smooth
blending of shoulder blades and sharp withers. This insures room for the
heart and lungs to do their work with ease and also is evidence of proper
muscle and ligament strength.
FRONT LEGS. The goat's front legs should be straight, perpendicular to the
ground, sound in the knees and full at the pint of the elbow. The legs should
move with the front feet pointing straight ahead.
BACK. A back that is straight, strong, wide, long and level is desired in
goats. This denotes a strong body build with good muscling and is indicative
of strength to carry large quantities of feed.
RUMP. The goat's rump should be long, wide and level from thurl to thurl,
cleanly fleshed and have a slight slope from hips to pins. The shape of
the rump is important as it affects leg set.
HIND LEGS. The goat's rear legs should be wide apart and straight when viewed
from the rear, with clean hocks and a good combination of bone refinement
and strength. Observed from the side, a plumb line originating at the pin
bone would fall parallel to the leg bone from hock to pastern and touch
the ground behind the heel of the foot. The resulting angles produced at
the hock and stifle joint will be most ideal for easy walking and a minimum
of joint problems.
FEET. Meat goats need strong pasterns and strong, well-formed feet with
tight toes, deep heel and level sole. Such feet are highly resistant to
injury or infection and easy to keep trimmed. Goats with uneven toes and
extremely weak pasterns should be culled.
MUSCLE
Meat characteristics can be visually determined by examining the animal
hindquarters loin, shoulders and neck.
HINDQUARTERS. A long, deeply attached muscle, relatively thick at
the thigh and stifle is desirable in meat goats. Heavier muscling on the
outside of the leg is acceptable. Muscle over the thurl and rump should
be obvious.
LOIN. The loin eye or ribeye is typically the best indicator of meatiness
in market goats. It should be wide with a symmetrically oval shape on each
side of the backbone. This musc1e should carry forward over the ribs or
rack.
SHOULDERS. The goat's muscling should increase from the withers to the point
of the shoulder with the thickest muscle occurrng immediately above the
chest floor. The circumference of the forearm is the second most important
indicator of meatiness, so the forearm muscle should exhibit a prominent
bulge and should tie in deep into the knee.
NECK. The juncture of the neck and shoulder should be free of excess tissue.
It should gently slope to indicate muscling. Smoothness and quality are
important in this area. A long clean neck with muscling in balance to the
remainder of the animal is desired.
CONDITION
The term condition refers to the amount of finish or fat the animal is
carrying. Goats deposit fat internally before they do externally. The ideal
condition is a thin, but uniform, covering over the loin, rib and shoulder.
The external fat thickness over the loin at the 13th rib should be between
.08 to .12 inches or an average .1 inch.
Finally, as a parent, I caution the reader about being raucously
critical of any judge. All I ask of myself (or any other judge) is consistency.
If the goats in the grand drive are similar except for their variation in
weight, the judge has done what was asked of him or her. If we took the
wrong type of goat and my children didn’t do well, that’s our
fault. We need to pay closer attention and do our homework.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Information used for this criteria was taken from Texas Agricultural Extension
Service Publication B-5018. Other Extension Service Meat Goat Publications
Include:
B-5021
Spanish Goat Management
By: Joe C. Paschal, B. Frank Craddock, C. Wayne Hanselka, and Dale Rollins
L-5028
Feeding, Fitting and Showing Suggestions For Spanish Goat Projects
By: Edmundo E. Martinez, Joe C. Paschal, Frank Craddock and C. Wayne Hanselka
B-5034
South Texas Cabrito Recipes
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