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Committees > Marketing > Evaluating Your Market Kids
Assigning Selection Grades
Evaluating goats for market grade and readiness
is a critical skill for a meat goat farmer. There are three USDA
selection grades for live goats. These grades are supposed to be
based on the meat type conformation of the goat (how thickly muscled
is it regardless of fat cover). Selection 1 goats should have a
pronounced bulging to the outside hindleg, a full, rounded backstrip
and a moderately thick outside shoulder. Selection 2 goats have
moderate meat conformation while Selection 3 have inferior
conformation.

Some buyers will also
put in a 4th grade for very unhealthy goats. Utility or “cull” goats
are goats that are being culled for a serious unsoundness or appear
very unthrifty.
It is difficult for
weaned market kids from dairy goat breeds originating in the Alps to
grade Selection 1 because their muscles tend to be very long and
lean in appearance. Some Nubian, La Mancha and Kiko kids show more
bulge to their muscles while Boer X kids and certain strains of
myotonic goats such as the Tennessee Meat Goat have more potential
to reach Selection 1. However, management and health are major
influences on selection grade. Also, even though fat covering is not
supposed to be a consideration, muscles with some fat covering tend
to look thicker. Selection grades do not always go side by side with
customer preferences. Just because a goat is Selection 1 does not
mean it will be the optimum goat for a specific market. The
customer’s desires with regard for age, sex, carcass weight, and fat
covering must be met.
Determining market readiness
You always need to
consider the special needs of the marketing channel you are working
with when determining whether your kids are “market ready”. Even
though selection grades are supposed to be scored without
consideration of fat cover, you may find that fat covering
influences your decision on whether your kids are ready for your
market.
In the example below, both Boer X market kids may qualify as
Selection 1. However, the kid in the top row has little or no
surplus fat. He may be “market ready” if you are being paid by live
weight and he was cheaper to raise than the more finished kid below.
This is especially true if he is being slaughtered on-farm or at a
live animal market by ethnic customers who want no excess fat and
plan to consume the meat without chilling the carcass.
However, he has two
disadvantages compared to the goat in the bottom row if you are paid
by his hanging carcass weight rather than by live weight and if he
is to be slaughtered and chilled at a conventional slaughterhouse
for sale to a restaurant or retail outlet. First, his dressing
percentage and hence his carcass weight and the price you received
would have been better if you had let him fatten a few more weeks.
Secondly, his carcass (despite having as much muscle or more than
the other kid) lacks almost any protective fat covering. It will
chill rapidly when put in the cooler and be highly susceptible to
cold shock. Cold shock (contraction or shortening of the muscles
from rapid chilling) will toughen his meat.
His readiness for
market depends on which of these channels you have targeted. He may
be perfect if your buyer is a live animal market worried about quick
weight losses on fatter kids once they are purchased live and held
for slaughter until the perfect direct consumer comes along.
However, this kid is probably being slaughtered prematurely if your
buyer plans to butcher him immediately and sell the chilled carcass
to a restaurant chef putting a top priority on tenderness. In
contrast, the bottom kid is ready for such a market.

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