Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Making a Hut a Home

We currently have........a crapload of goats.  Hold on, let me think about it.

We currently have thirteen goats.  And with the exception of really cold nights when I open up the kidding pens, the only shelter they have is the main entrance of the barn, underneath the barn (which is their preferred hideout), a goat hut we made several years back, three "dogloo" type houses, and the three 55-gallon barrels set up in pyramid fashion (which only the kids and chickens actually use).

So although everyone has the chance to hunker down in a sheltered area during rain and cold snaps, it is not going to be that way come April when the kids start popping out.  We need to either make another shed or lean-to for them, or make more goat huts.  Since our eventual plan is to have the goats moved from area to area during the year, it made more sense to make multiple, smaller, mobile goat huts than to start making larger, permanent shelters in the different areas.  Especially since we're not entirely certain where those areas are going to be or how they will be fenced off.

Since the weather was so warm and beautiful this weekend, we got a building bug up our butts and started another goat hut.  It all begins with a pallet and we build on from there.


We've accumulated several pallets over the years as well as odd pieces of lumber, salvaged decking, 1/4 sheets of plywood (thanks, Dad!), irregular sized scraps of tin roofing and other odds 'n ends.  With the exception of a handful of brads, everything that we used to make the new goat hut was recycled, even the nails!

So even though we used some of our homestead building materials inventory, we spent less than a dollar (very high estimate of the cost of the new brads, although we already had them on hand) on the entire project.  And once the weather warms up, I plan on painting it.  With red paint I got for a song a few years back at the "Ooops" section of the local hardware store.

Is this goat hut a little hillbilly looking?  Of course it is.  Is this goat hut going to be featured on Martha Steward's "Small Scale Farming"?  Of course it isn't.  But I don't think the goats care.  In fact, when Paul used the tractor to place the new hut in the goat yard, there was a rush to see who would get inside first:

Don't get me wrong.  I've seen several goat houses and chicken coops featured on blogs or on pinterest that look totally awesome.  And I suppose if we spent a little more time and expended a little more effort on this project, it could have looked much more charming:

But we only spent four hours on it.  And it didn't cost us squat.  And the goats are just going to crap all over it anyhow.  So I'm calling it good.

7 comments:

  1. I see you have a very adorable 'kid' in that box. Snort. That's a great idea and great use of bits and pieces lying around. By the time your actual spring comes around and you have 52 goats, you will be all set. Right? :)

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  2. Carolyn,

    I like your hut, easy to make with supplies you've already had, and realistic. Something we would build.

    People actually make places like this little house with all the fancy decorative items for their critters? Seems like a waste of time and money.

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  3. Hubby and I were talking just this past weekend about the housing our goats had when we first moved up here and were struggling to keep a roof over our own heads. It was much like the one you just built, except it was 4' x 8', south facing with a goat-sized door cut near the end of the 8' front side. We hung a couple layers of burlap sacks over the door in the winter and the goats were always snug and warm in there.

    As far as that last picture of the Blue Goat Mansion, I'm assuming it has central heat and air??

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  4. I think it looks great and the goats obviously like it so go you! The fancy goat house made me smile. This past weekend my mom, daughter & I went on a small road trip this past weekend. It was through mostly rural areas. At one point I saw a farmhouse with a smaller replica in its yard. It wasn't big enough to be a playhouse for kids but it was one heck of a dog house! I asked my mom and Kiernan if they saw the wee little house. They hadn't and thought I was nuts. Thankfully they saw it on the return trip!

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  5. The goat shed gets my approval l00%! Some of those cutesy outbuildings I see make me cringe..............now,how many more will you have to build?

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  6. I think your hut looks good. I really like the "kid" inside of it. lol

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  7. You crack me up. Love how you think. Just revisited my blog where you commented about wild leeks remember waaaay back???? Anywhoo this is your REMINDER. Two years LATE (sorry, farm life ya know?), to post photos of the things you have that you thought might be wild leeks. Spring is coming!

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