Goat manure is as valuable as that of sheep.
Angora venison cannot be told from lamb.
Goats scorn to eat fresh grass if coarse weeds like wild carrot, mullein, dock, etc., are in sight.
Every part of a goat is salable. Fleece, milk, cheese, skin, flesh, tallow, bones, hoofs, horns, and manure.
Goats improve land. They are "lifelong scavengers," and can put land covered with useless underbrush into shape for pasture more cheaply and more quickly than dynamite.
A herd of common goats can be built up in a few years. They breed at one year and usually have twins.
Goats are hardy; less subject to disease than sheep.
A good goat is a money-maker.
These statements are quoted directly from the writings of men and women of experience. They have no goats to sell, so you can take their word.
The requirements for successful goat raising are few and easy to provide. They are these: