About this item

Eggs, meat, milk, wool, fur, feathers, and some priceless bucolic bliss. No hobby farm is complete without critters ... possibly a small herd peppering the field or a microflock flapping around the hen house or pond. A single information-packed volume with everything a hobby farmer needs to know about farm animals, this new comprehensive manual to selecting, caring for, and breeding livestock brings forth the expertise of six hobby farmers, each of whom has real-life on-the-farm experience with the animals she discusses. Whether you're contemplating adding a small herd of sheep or goats to your existing hobby farm or you've always wondered about the benefits of raising angora rabbits or Muscovy ducks, Livestock for Your Hobby Farm provides the kind of guidance you need to begin a herd or flock and expand your pens and fencing.



About the Author

Sue Weaver

Sue began writing professionally in 1969 when her first article was published in The Western Horseman magazine. Since then she's written hundreds of published articles, first specializing in horse magazines, then publications affiliated with Hobby Farms magazine. She's also written 13 books for mainline publishing houses: four in the Hobby Farms series and a standalone book about miniature goats for CompanionHouse Books (a.k.a. Bowtie Press, i-5 Publishing, and Lumina Press) ; seven for Storey Publishing, including Storey's Guide to Raising Meat Goats written under her pseudonym, Maggie Sayer; and a stunning new goat book for for Princeton University Press. All relate to livestock or poultry including pigs, goats, sheep, cattle, chickens, donkeys, llamas, and alpacas. Nowadays she writes and self-publishes ebooks. She is a self-taught writer.Sue was a horse-obsessed child and used her allowance, babysitting money, and berry picking income to buy her first horse when she was 12 years old; 61 years later she's still going strong. Her hobbies include compiling picture pedigrees of her horses and studying equine (horse) , caprine (goat) , and ovine (sheep) behavior. Sue lives on a 29-acre property in the southern Ozarks, along with her husband of 45 years and a huge animal family composed of horses, full-size and miniature; a donkey; a llama; Miniature Cheviot and Katahdin sheep; Nubian, Alpine, LaMancha, Nigerian Dwarf, MiniMancha, MiniMyotonic, and mixed breed goats; a tame razorback hog; chickens; guinea fowl; a passel of dogs, most of which are former rescues; and a feral cat colony. The money she earns from writing is used to support her animals. Thank you for buying her books!



Read Next Recommendation

Report incorrect product information.