CM
WKR
Not wanting to take this into the weeds but... A number of years ago I came out of nasty creek crossing on my horse only to come nose to nose with a llama. An exciting experience. After that I heard of people buying a llama to put in with their horses to precondition them to the encounters. For the most part the 80s llamas have gone away in my country and we haven't seen any goats yet. Has anyone on horses encountered goats? If so what was the reaction?
I have a string of goats, I've ran into horses a few times, I try my hardest to be considerate and give horses as wide a berth as possible given the terrain and usually it's okay. We ran 3 guys with 5 mules once. The guys at the beginning and the end were riding a mule and leading another one. The wife of one of the guys was riding in the middle. I saw them coming and got the goats 50-60 yards off the trail to let them pass. the first two passed fine, the 3rd one ridden by the wife freaked out at the goats but the lady got it calmed down before it turned into very much of a rodeo. She had to dismount and lead that mule past us.
Like has been mentioned goats are a great entry level pack animal and require much less land and investment than horses/mules. All the positives/negatives have been laid out pretty well in this trhead. One other thing I'd like to mention that hasn't been brought up is goats are pretty picky with feed. If you don't have a lot of acreage for them to browse you have to make sure they have the right calcium to phosphorous ratio or they will get urinary calculi (similar to kidney stones) and die. A lot of people just think you can feed them whatever and they'll be fine and they are a bit more picky than that.
One day I'd like to own horses or mules but the goats have been pretty good. It's nice to not have to water them every day when hunting. They obviously can't carry nearly as much as a larger animal and you can't ride them but they take the edge off a long backpack hunt.