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(Clover on the left, Nutmeg on the right.)
I know. I’m weird. I took a photo to compare Clover’s and Nutmeg’s udders. I don’t really think Clover can be pregnant, but sometimes I wonder if she’s fooling me. She’s dainty (slender, for a goat), despite all the cookies. Nutmeg, on the other hand, is a tub o’ lard and always looks like she’s about to drop triplets. (It’s impossible for Nutmeg to be pregnant unless it was an immaculate conception.) I don’t even think it means anything that Clover’s udder is larger than Nutmeg’s. After all, Clover has had babies before and Nutmeg hasn’t.
Girth comparison (Clover on the left, Nutmeg-the-pig on the right.)

Clover has always been a big eater.
Case in point and the evidence:

When I took Clover to the vet, he agreed she was on the slender side, but she checked out healthy. She’s just a naturally skinny girl. I even feed her extra, trying to fatten her up. She won’t fatten up. She’s wormed regularly. She must have lovely metabolism.
If she’s pregnant, she was bred sometime between the end of February and early part of March, so she could be anywhere from three to three and a half months pregnant. I’ve been told that it can be difficult to tell, sometimes right up almost to the end, if a goat is pregnant, particularly if they are a slender goat. (A goat’s pregnancy lasts five months.)
So is she or isn’t she? I don’t think so, but….
Only Clover knows, and she’s not telling.

Skinny wench.
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3:04
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Love your blog, Suzanne!
Cindy
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We brought home a sweet 5 month old pygmy goat home to keep our recently bereft pygmy company. Goaty-Goat was not all pleased to have a new friend provided and it took some time for a friendship to develop between the goats. After a few months, all had settled and Snowflake was beginning to get the same wide load look as her elder; we just assumed it was weight gain from all the chicken feed. About 4 months after Snowflake came home I bent down to take a close peek at her and almost had my eye knocked out by an enormously swollen udder. Ummm, that isn’t supposed to be there. I called the fellow we bought her from and he reckoned she was pregnant, though young. Snowflake, the teenage mother, had her kid about a week after we realized she was expecting. We had hardly any time to set up a layette. Her babe is a cute wee billy goat, Nubbins.
Clover will keep her secrets to herself until the end…
Amy
5:55
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7:07
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Cowboy was shooting bullets and didn’t do his job. It takes a little more than just keeping them in the same pen!
Maybe she was afraid to come out of the bathroom because her legs weren’t shaved. Buy her some perfume (male goats think pee is sexy, though) and a box or cookies and some alone time. You have to set the mood.
7:19
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~Jenny~
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7:49
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I bet she’s preggers. The billy is proven, so is she and she was bred.
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Tammy
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Keeping my fingers crossed for you – what a nice surpirse that was!
Beth in PA
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Suzanne I am
over this post! This city girl has NO clue!
1:15
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I found out the hard way that feral/stray cats could have two litters in one spring/summer. At one point there were 12 kittens from 2 females where previously they were only having one – I guess I fed them too well!!!
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I have a Hoosier – the sifter is gone and we use the bin to store recycled grocery bags, plus mine has a bread drawer. It’s not a really old one, but I love that thing
Dede
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I sure hope she is. There is nothing…I mean nothing cuter than Nigerian Dwarf babies.