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美国人新宠:小型农场动物

美联社
2024-08-16

美国人对饲养小型奶牛、山羊、驴和其他小型农场动物兴趣日增。

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美国人对饲养小型奶牛、山羊、驴和其他小型农场动物兴趣日增。

这些小家伙很可爱。吃得少,空间需求小,而且不用怎么哄还能帮忙割草。

美国人对饲养小型奶牛、山羊、驴和其他小型农场动物兴趣日增,趋势推动者主要是喜欢方便管理的家畜,还有喜欢养小型猪或小型绵羊当宠物的业余农场主。

饲养者表示,新冠时期越来越多人开始在后院养鸡,既有趣还能收获新鲜鸡蛋,之后小型农场动物的销量一直在增长。对鸡之类小型农场动物感兴趣的主要是新手,想要体验粗犷农耕生活。

“很少人能有几英亩地,但只要有一英亩,就能养一头小奶牛或几只小山羊,”布莱恩·加兹达说,他在爱达荷州东部有个小农场,跟两个朋友共同运营名叫“业余玩农场”的YouTube账号。

乡村生活零售商Tractor Supply公司副总裁兼部门商品经理马丁·费什表示,YouTube等平台,尤其是TikTok在介绍小型农场动物方面作用很大。每天都有TikTok用户发布蓝眼睛小山羊还有2英尺矮马的萌系短视频,播放量达数百万。

不过费什认为,这一趋势是顾客体验过散养鸡舍之后的自然选择。为此,Tractor Supply 增加了小型和普通体型猪和山羊的饲料。

“这些动物都被当成家庭的成员,”费什说。

有些人买小型农场动物是为以后饲养大型农场动物做准备,也有些人并无此意。一些小型农场动物的主人接待游客参观、饲养动物,以及写博客讲述经历,最终将爱好变成了副业。

但加兹达和其他业余农场主表示,新手在成为老麦克唐纳(美国著名儿歌,讲述老麦克唐纳在农场里饲养了各种动物——译者注)之前,应该充分考虑各种挑战。

包括:各种小型农场动物价格波动。动物很可爱,也可能有攻击性。

小型山羊

布列塔尼·斯诺是佛罗里达州的高中英语老师,养了几只尼日利亚小矮山羊。三年前,她全家从杰克逊维尔郊区的米德尔堡搬到附近的梅尔罗斯,实现了住在农场的梦想。

她说,疫情过后家人希望能自给自足,现在奶和鸡蛋等乳制品都不用买。她喜欢小型动物,因为照顾更简单,获取和饲养成本更低。

32岁的斯诺刚开始养了四只尼日利亚小矮山羊,取名为毛茛、雪花、钱钱和花生。后来花生和毛茛的孩子煎饼和奥利奥也加入其中。

斯诺买矮山羊是为了挤奶做奶酪和肥皂、乳液等。暂时还没成功,因为山羊只有分娩后才有奶,毛茛最近刚生了小羊。

“过去几年经历了学习曲线,”斯诺说。

小山羊是最受欢迎的入门级小型动物之一。过去一年里,饲养者在小型奶山羊协会登记了约8330只小山羊。总部位于北卡罗来纳州的协会业务经理安吉莉娅·奥尔登(表示,与2021年7月之前一年相比增长了73%,当时注册人数略低于4800人,主要是育种者喜欢的新生母羊。

奥尔登说,很多喜欢小山羊的人几年后很可能卖掉,因为照顾起来挑战不小而且很昂贵。动物饲料成本上涨令人头疼,此外因农场兽医短缺,想获得医疗服务也不大方便。

小奶牛和驴

农场动物可能看起来体型很小但很强壮。社交媒体上一些毛茸茸的四脚明星奶牛重达500磅-600磅。最小的高不到3英尺,被称为微型小奶牛。TikTok创作者艾莉·西恩表示,稍大的小型奶牛身高可能有42英寸,她在TikTok上粉丝超过73.7万。关于小型奶牛的视频播放量已数百万。

2020年,28岁的西恩以5000美元转售了一头价值350美元生了病的小奶牛,之后自己创办了养殖和销售小奶牛的企业。去年,她位于密苏里州的公司Mini Moos LLC卖出了约190头小牛。大致包括小奶牛和微型小奶牛,售价从2000美元到30000美元不等。

“业务飞速发展,”西恩说。

其他经营者的业务也相当红火。

金·弗奇斯和丈夫肯在北卡罗来纳州西杰斐逊有一处农场,夫妇二人饲养小型驴近20年,目前农场里有几十头地中海小型驴,高度都不超过3英尺。

疫情之前,每年通常能卖出约8头驴,如果能卖到几千美元就算幸运。现在每年能卖出约20头。弗奇斯说,最近卖出的一头小型驴价格为7500美元。有些要给到9000美元或更高价格才愿意卖。

新型“异国情调”宠物

加兹达说,有些顾客也有计划繁育和销售小型动物,但不少人表示很多人只想要充满“异国情调”的宠物。

今年早些时候,41岁的杰米·坎皮恩和丈夫杰夫从田纳西州汤普森站家附近买了两只娃娃南丘羊,每只800美元。2022年3月,夫妇二人从芝加哥搬来,之前的疫情让两人重新思考生活方式。现在他们住在一处现代风格农舍,建在一英亩土地上。

饼干和酪乳已变成优秀的草坪修剪工,杰米·坎皮恩说,在她眼里这两只约70磅20英寸高的小家伙跟狗狗猫猫区别不大。

“小羊吃草就行,所以不用每周去买食物,”坎皮恩说,她是在Instagram上发现的小羊。

但养羊也有挑战。

有一次,杰米·坎皮恩给一只羊注射口服药治疗寄生虫,结果二头肌撕裂。

但更多时候小羊带来的是快乐。杰米·坎皮恩回忆起下雪的一天,她没栓绳,带着两只羊在附近散步。

她说:“小羊在后面紧跟着,我们就像羊与牧羊人。”

小型动物提供治疗

其他人发现了治疗的好处。

丽莎·莫德是俄亥俄州汉密尔顿七橡树的农场主,有13匹小型马和3匹普通马。她经常把小型马带到当地的疗养院和医院,为老年人和其他人群提供特殊治疗和关怀。不过疫情以来,她花了很多时间为希望投身这一工作的人们提供在线培训。

培训包括教马绕过轮椅和进入医院电梯。她说,小型马体重仍能到175到200磅,不过已经比1200到1500磅的普通马轻得多。

“马儿很温顺,但很容易受惊吓,”她说,“不能随便牵着马进医院。”(财富中文网)

译者:梁宇

审校:夏林

美国人对饲养小型奶牛、山羊、驴和其他小型农场动物兴趣日增。

这些小家伙很可爱。吃得少,空间需求小,而且不用怎么哄还能帮忙割草。

美国人对饲养小型奶牛、山羊、驴和其他小型农场动物兴趣日增,趋势推动者主要是喜欢方便管理的家畜,还有喜欢养小型猪或小型绵羊当宠物的业余农场主。

饲养者表示,新冠时期越来越多人开始在后院养鸡,既有趣还能收获新鲜鸡蛋,之后小型农场动物的销量一直在增长。对鸡之类小型农场动物感兴趣的主要是新手,想要体验粗犷农耕生活。

“很少人能有几英亩地,但只要有一英亩,就能养一头小奶牛或几只小山羊,”布莱恩·加兹达说,他在爱达荷州东部有个小农场,跟两个朋友共同运营名叫“业余玩农场”的YouTube账号。

乡村生活零售商Tractor Supply公司副总裁兼部门商品经理马丁·费什表示,YouTube等平台,尤其是TikTok在介绍小型农场动物方面作用很大。每天都有TikTok用户发布蓝眼睛小山羊还有2英尺矮马的萌系短视频,播放量达数百万。

不过费什认为,这一趋势是顾客体验过散养鸡舍之后的自然选择。为此,Tractor Supply 增加了小型和普通体型猪和山羊的饲料。

“这些动物都被当成家庭的成员,”费什说。

有些人买小型农场动物是为以后饲养大型农场动物做准备,也有些人并无此意。一些小型农场动物的主人接待游客参观、饲养动物,以及写博客讲述经历,最终将爱好变成了副业。

但加兹达和其他业余农场主表示,新手在成为老麦克唐纳(美国著名儿歌,讲述老麦克唐纳在农场里饲养了各种动物——译者注)之前,应该充分考虑各种挑战。

包括:各种小型农场动物价格波动。动物很可爱,也可能有攻击性。

小型山羊

布列塔尼·斯诺是佛罗里达州的高中英语老师,养了几只尼日利亚小矮山羊。三年前,她全家从杰克逊维尔郊区的米德尔堡搬到附近的梅尔罗斯,实现了住在农场的梦想。

她说,疫情过后家人希望能自给自足,现在奶和鸡蛋等乳制品都不用买。她喜欢小型动物,因为照顾更简单,获取和饲养成本更低。

32岁的斯诺刚开始养了四只尼日利亚小矮山羊,取名为毛茛、雪花、钱钱和花生。后来花生和毛茛的孩子煎饼和奥利奥也加入其中。

斯诺买矮山羊是为了挤奶做奶酪和肥皂、乳液等。暂时还没成功,因为山羊只有分娩后才有奶,毛茛最近刚生了小羊。

“过去几年经历了学习曲线,”斯诺说。

小山羊是最受欢迎的入门级小型动物之一。过去一年里,饲养者在小型奶山羊协会登记了约8330只小山羊。总部位于北卡罗来纳州的协会业务经理安吉莉娅·奥尔登(表示,与2021年7月之前一年相比增长了73%,当时注册人数略低于4800人,主要是育种者喜欢的新生母羊。

奥尔登说,很多喜欢小山羊的人几年后很可能卖掉,因为照顾起来挑战不小而且很昂贵。动物饲料成本上涨令人头疼,此外因农场兽医短缺,想获得医疗服务也不大方便。

小奶牛和驴

农场动物可能看起来体型很小但很强壮。社交媒体上一些毛茸茸的四脚明星奶牛重达500磅-600磅。最小的高不到3英尺,被称为微型小奶牛。TikTok创作者艾莉·西恩表示,稍大的小型奶牛身高可能有42英寸,她在TikTok上粉丝超过73.7万。关于小型奶牛的视频播放量已数百万。

2020年,28岁的西恩以5000美元转售了一头价值350美元生了病的小奶牛,之后自己创办了养殖和销售小奶牛的企业。去年,她位于密苏里州的公司Mini Moos LLC卖出了约190头小牛。大致包括小奶牛和微型小奶牛,售价从2000美元到30000美元不等。

“业务飞速发展,”西恩说。

其他经营者的业务也相当红火。

金·弗奇斯和丈夫肯在北卡罗来纳州西杰斐逊有一处农场,夫妇二人饲养小型驴近20年,目前农场里有几十头地中海小型驴,高度都不超过3英尺。

疫情之前,每年通常能卖出约8头驴,如果能卖到几千美元就算幸运。现在每年能卖出约20头。弗奇斯说,最近卖出的一头小型驴价格为7500美元。有些要给到9000美元或更高价格才愿意卖。

新型“异国情调”宠物

加兹达说,有些顾客也有计划繁育和销售小型动物,但不少人表示很多人只想要充满“异国情调”的宠物。

今年早些时候,41岁的杰米·坎皮恩和丈夫杰夫从田纳西州汤普森站家附近买了两只娃娃南丘羊,每只800美元。2022年3月,夫妇二人从芝加哥搬来,之前的疫情让两人重新思考生活方式。现在他们住在一处现代风格农舍,建在一英亩土地上。

饼干和酪乳已变成优秀的草坪修剪工,杰米·坎皮恩说,在她眼里这两只约70磅20英寸高的小家伙跟狗狗猫猫区别不大。

“小羊吃草就行,所以不用每周去买食物,”坎皮恩说,她是在Instagram上发现的小羊。

但养羊也有挑战。

有一次,杰米·坎皮恩给一只羊注射口服药治疗寄生虫,结果二头肌撕裂。

但更多时候小羊带来的是快乐。杰米·坎皮恩回忆起下雪的一天,她没栓绳,带着两只羊在附近散步。

她说:“小羊在后面紧跟着,我们就像羊与牧羊人。”

小型动物提供治疗

其他人发现了治疗的好处。

丽莎·莫德是俄亥俄州汉密尔顿七橡树的农场主,有13匹小型马和3匹普通马。她经常把小型马带到当地的疗养院和医院,为老年人和其他人群提供特殊治疗和关怀。不过疫情以来,她花了很多时间为希望投身这一工作的人们提供在线培训。

培训包括教马绕过轮椅和进入医院电梯。她说,小型马体重仍能到175到200磅,不过已经比1200到1500磅的普通马轻得多。

“马儿很温顺,但很容易受惊吓,”她说,“不能随便牵着马进医院。”(财富中文网)

译者:梁宇

审校:夏林

They’re adorable. They require less food and space. And without much coaxing, they might help cut the grass.

Americans are showing more interest in owning miniature cows, goats, donkeys and other diminutive farm animals, a trend driven by hobby farmers looking for easy-to-manage livestock and homesteaders who like the idea of having a petite pig or a scaled-down sheep as a pet.

Animal breeders say sales of pint-sized farm animals have grown since the COVID-19 pandemic, when more people started raising backyard chickens for fun and fresh eggs. Like chickens, mini farm animals appeal to beginners who want the taste of a rugged, agrarian lifestyle.

“A lot of people don’t have access to several acres, but if they have a one-acre plot, they can keep a miniature cow or a few miniature goats,” said Brian Gazda, who has a small farm in East Idaho and with two friends runs a YouTube channel called “Hobby Farm Guys.”

Platforms like YouTube and especially TikTok have played an important part in raising the profile of mini farm animals, said Martin Fysh, a vice president and divisional merchandising manager for rural lifestyle retailer Tractor Supply Co. On any given day, TikTok users put cuteness on parade with videos of tiny blue-eyed goats and 2-foot-tall horses that have received millions of views.

But Fysh thinks the trend also reflects a natural progression among customers who started out with a backyard hen coop. In response, Tractor Supply has increased its selection of treats for both mini and regular sized pigs, and goats.

“They’re seen as part of the extended family, ” Fysh said.

While some people buy small farm animals as a stepping stone to owning larger ones, others don’t have a desire to expand. Some owners of mini farm animals turn their hobbies into side hustles by giving visitor tours, breeding animals, and blogging about their pastoral experiences.

But before playing Old Macdonald, newcomers need to weigh the pros and cons, Gazda and other hobby farmers said.

Among the challenges: the volatile nature of prices for each of the types of miniature farm animals. And while they’re cute, they can also be aggressive.

Mini goats

Brittany Snow, a high school English teacher in Florida, owns several small-sized Nigerian Dwarf goats. She realized her dream of living on a farm three years ago when her family moved from the Jacksonville suburb of Middleburg to nearby Melrose.

She said her family wanted to be more self-sustaining after the pandemic and now sources its own dairy products, such as milk and eggs. She sticks mostly with miniature animals because they’re easier to take care of and cost less to acquire and feed.

Snow, 32, started with four Nigerian Dwarf goats: Buttercup, Snowflake, Cash and Peanut. The herd has since expanded to include Pancake and Oreo, the kids of Peanut and Buttercup.

Snow purchased the Nigerian Dwarf goats intending to milk them to make cheese and products like soap and lotion. But that hasn’t worked yet because goats only lactate after giving birth, and Buttercup only recently had her kids.

“The past few years have been a learning curve,” Snow said.

Mini goats are one of the most popular entry-level mini animals. In the past year, animal breeders have registered roughly 8,330 mini goats with the Miniature Dairy Goat Association. That’s a 73% jump from the 12 months before July 2021, when registrations — mostly for newborn females sought after by breeders — totaled just under 4,800, said Angelia Alden, a business operations manager for the North Carolina-based organization.

Many folks who favor mini goats, however, tend to sell them after a few years because it can be challenging — and expensive — to take care of them, Alden said. Rising animal feed costs can be a headache, as is finding adequate medical care due to a shortage of farm veterinarians.

Mini cows and donkeys

A farm animal can be both mini and mighty. Some of the four-legged stars on social media are furry cows that can weigh 500-600 pounds. The smallest, which stand under 3 feet in height, are known as micro-miniatures. The slightly bigger miniatures can be as tall as 42 inches, according to Allie Sine, a TikTok creator with more than 737,000 followers on the platform. Videos showcasing some of her mini cows have gotten millions of views.

Sine, 28, launched her own business breeding and selling mini cows in 2020 after reselling a sick mini cow that cost $350 for $5,000. Last year, she sold about 190 calves through her Missouri-based business, Mini Moos LLC. The calves were roughly split between mini and micromini cows that can cost from $2,000 to $30,000.

“Everything just skyrocketed,” Sine said.

Others report a similar boom.

Kim Furches, who owns a farm with her husband, Ken, in West Jefferson, North Carolina, said the couple bred mini donkeys for about 20 years and currently own dozens of Mediterranean miniature donkeys, which stand 3 feet high or less.

Before the pandemic, they would typically sell about eight donkeys per year and count themselves lucky if they received a couple thousand dollars for one. They now sell about 20 per year. The last mini donkey sold for $7,500, Furches said. There are some she’s only willing to sell for $9,000 or more.

New types of ‘exotic’ pets

Though some of their customers plan to breed and sell mini animals, too, many say many are just looking for “exotic” pets, Gazda said.

Earlier this year, Jamie Campion, 41, and her husband, Jeff, bought two Southdown Babydoll sheep from a local breeder near their home in Thompson’s Station, Tennessee, for $800 each. The couple moved from Chicago in March 2022 after the pandemic made them rethink their lifestyle. They now live in a modern-style farmhouse built on an acre of land.

While Biscuit and Buttermilk have become excellent lawn trimmers, Jamie Campion said she considers the animals — which weigh about 70 pounds and stand 20 inches high — similar to a dog or a cat.

“They eat the grass, so we don’t even have to buy food (for the sheep) on a weekly basis,” said Campion who discovered the breed on Instagram.

But it can be challenging.

One time, Jeff Campion tried to inject one of sheep with oral medication to treat parasites, and it tore his bicep.

But more often, the sheep give her joy. Jamie Campion recalls taking them out on a snowy day for a walk in the neighborhood, without a leash.

“They just followed right behind,” she said. “There’s a whole sheep and shepherd relationship. “

Miniature animals offer therapy

Others see therapeutic benefits.

Lisa Moad, who is the owner of Seven Oaks Farm in Hamilton, Ohio and has 13 miniature horses and three regular size horses, operates a therapy farm for older people and others. She also used to take the miniature horses to local nursing homes and hospitals. But since the pandemic, she has spent most of her timing conducting online training for those looking to embrace the same mission.

That includes teaching horses how to maneuver around wheelchairs and into elevators of hospitals. She said her miniature versions still weigh 175 to 200 pounds, though much less than her regular horses, which range from 1,200 to 1,500 pounds.

“They’re docile, but they can get frightened easily, ” she said. “You just can’t walk into a hospital with a horse.”

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