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Training Your Kids To Use A Lambar Lisa Segerīaby goats won’t just know how to use a lambar-at first, you will need to help them. Push the tubing into the nipple. Fill with milk, secure to a fence or place in a stand, and get your life back! Cut a length of tubing that will hit the bottom. Measure the distance from the nipple to the bottom of your container. Next, give a good tug from the outside to pull the entire cylindrical part to the front to secure. Push your lambar nipples through the hole from inside the bucket. (This can be as simple as strapping it to a fence and as complicated as welding up a bucket holding stand.)Ĭount the number of nipples you need to feed kids, and drill that number of 5/8-inch holes in the top of your bucket. Be sure to space the holes at least 2 inches apart to give each kid room to drink. a way to keep your lambar from tipping during use.

lambar nipples (available through most livestock- or goat-supply websites).Anything you can drill through and will hold milk will work.)

bucket or similar container to hold the milk (This can range from a 5-gallon bucket to a stainless steel bathroom trashcan to a file box.Here is a step-by-step on building and some tips for training your kids to use it. Building your own lambar can save you money and also ensure you get the right size/set-up for your needs. We bought our first lambar from a goat-supply catalog but have built several more in the years since then and have shown others how to make their own, too. Enter the lambar, a self-serve milk bar for goat kids. While it’s fun for one or two babies for one or two weeks, there may come a time when you would like-or flat-out need-an easier way to feed. While you may dam-raise yours, there will inevitably come a time you, too, will need to bottle feed. In commercial dairy operations, it is standard practice to bottle-raise goat kids.
