• Home
  • Animals Farms Products
  • Pricing
  • Websites
  • List your animals
    • Sign In
    • Sign up - Get started
    • Help & Support
    • Herd Management Website Hosting About Openherd

Search Animals for Sale

  • Alpacas (8314)
  • Goats (395)
  • Swine (10)
  • Yak (85)
  • Sheep (95)
  • Dogs (28)
  • Llamas (38)
  • Chickens (18)
  • Cattle (15)
  • Miniature Cattle (3)
  • Rabbits (23)
  • Horses (32)
  • Miniature Horses (15)
  • Ducks (5)
  • Donkeys (16)
  • Birds (3)
  • Geese (2)
  • Quail (1)

— The Openherd Team

Browser not Supported

Please update your browser to a current version of

  • Google Chrome
  • Mozilla Firefox
  • Microsoft Edge
  • Opera
Little Nickelbush Farm - Logo

Little Nickelbush Farm

Raising Calm and Productive Livestock

Share
  • Email a Link
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on X
  • Pin on Pinterest
Save
 Photos
Katrina Mae
Dabob
Quilcene, WA, 98376
[email protected]
Send Message
  • About
  • Animals
  • Photos
Book a farm event >
Share
  • Email a Link
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on X
  • Pin on Pinterest
Save
Little Nickelbush Farm - Logo
Goats57
Breeding Chart
  • Guernsey1
    • Breeding Stock1
      • Doe1
    • Sold8
      • Sr. Doe2
      • Doe1
      • Jr. Doe1
      • Dry Yearling1
      • Buck3
  • Saanen2
    • Breeding Stock2
      • Buck2
    • Sold12
      • Sr. Doe4
      • Jr. Doe3
      • Buck5
  • Saansey9
    • Breeding Stock9
      • Doe4
      • Kid (female)2
      • Buck3
    • For Sale2
      • Buck2
    • Sold23
      • Sr. Doe1
      • Doe10
      • Jr. Doe2
      • Dry Yearling2
      • Kid (female)3
      • Buck5
  • Sable0
    • Sold1
      • Sr. Doe1


FF udder

British Guernsey

Ruth/Tiara

Goat, Guernsey, Doe (female) | Red Gold

GGBoA | DOB: 2/22/2020

Sire:
BG Stumphollo Fancypants
 
|
Fancypants is a fancy buck with a long coat with white patches on a light gold coat. He seems to improve udders which we appreciate. His daughters are producing nicely.
Dam:
HB Pirucreek Trinket
 
|
Trinket has been the sleeper in our Guernsey herd. She doesn't milk as much as some others, but at the end of the year her production has been steady and final numbers show she is not a flash in the pan, but the one who produces well in the long run. Milk Production in Scientific Data: 2016: 260 days, 1570 pounds milk, 4.3% butterfat (68 pounds), 3.1% protein (75 pounds) 2017: 205 days. 2288 pounds milk, 4.9% butterfat (112 pounds), 2.8% protein (65 pounds) 2018: 305 days, 2371 pounds milk, 4.34% butterfat (103 pounds), 2.95% protein (70 pounds) 2019: 317 days, 2699 pounds milk, 4.67% butterfat (126 pounds), 2.96% protein (80 pounds)
Service Sire:
Ronan

Saanen

Ronan

SaanenBuck (male)White
DOB: 5/15/20224 yrs
Picking up Ronan was a nightmare (sellers didn't stop at our meeting place, instead making us track them down inside the massive Puyallup fairgrounds after dark), but his genetics were so worth it... Until I got him home. The very first time I saw him in daylight I noticed how weird his jaw looked. The fact that he couldn't seem to open his mouth fully, and he chewed SO slowly. I sent a video to my friend and she didn't see it, so I went ahead and bred him to the doe I'd bought JUST to breed him to (Ruth). But his jaw just kept getting worse and worse. He came to me thin, but he kept losing weight because he could barely eat. His teeth were sticking out all over the place, and if I tried to open his mouth past his normal stopping point he would scream in pain. I reached out to Melanie and she responded once and then ghosted me. I ended up putting Ronan down because he was so thin and miserable. Melanie never got back to me, although her mom eventually messaged and blamed the whole incident on me. Horrible experience. I ended up getting a single doeling from Ronan and she is BEAUTIFUL. No jaw, teeth, eating or weight issues. We will see how she matures.
More Details
  White

Price:

Sold

Ask seller a question

Details

Piru Creek Tiara (barn name Ruth) has only been with me for a few days, and already I can't imagine my barn without her. She is so sweet, so calm, so graceful and gentle... Exactly what I expect from a Guernsey.
What is NOT expected from a Guernsey though, is to milk over a gallon a day, but she did that as a first freshener!

Long story alert....
I've been looking to add this bloodline to my herd for well over a year, ever since I heard about a doe in California who produced over 3,000lbs of milk in 305 days! That's solid production for a SAANEN, and absolutely mindblowing for a Guernsey...
I spent several weeks trying to set up to buy a buckling out of that big producer (Piru Creek Jewel), but the seller couldn't get me the paperwork I needed and we missed out on transport (much to my devastation).
Then I found out that there was a Guernsey breeder in Seattle (Sarah) with Jewel's FULL sister Ruth/Tiara, and I immediately bought a buckling out of her! Unfortunately the buckling was horned and it just didn't work in my herd, so I had to send him back (Sarah was lovely about the whole thing) after breeding him to only ONE doe. For 5 months I waited and hoped for a buckling out of that doe that I could disbud and use in my herd, but nope. Twin doelings. Sigh.
So THEN I tried to talk Sarah into crossing Ruth with a Saanen buck, but (of course) there was no real benefit in that for her. Sigh. So finally I asked her which does I could buy outright, and cringed (you NEVER get the chance to buy the best goats in a herd!). But due to some bad luck on Sarah's side, I got lucky!!!! Unfortunately Ruth's udder was damaged this year as a second freshener when she packed 12+ pounds of colostrum into it. Her attachments held up surprisingly well, but her gland cisterns stretched out and while her udder is still functional, it's now unattractive (pictures are from her FIRST freshening before the damage).

The thing is, Guernseys aren't really BUILT to support massive milk production... They are smaller, daintier goats in general, with common genetic weakness that hinder them further (weak pasterns, minimal udder attachments, etc).
But luckily, Saanens have incredible capacity, so Ruth will work very well in my program. I will try to maintain the milk production from both sides of the pairing, and keeping only the most structurally sound and powerfully built of the offspring.


I am so so so so excited about the opportunity that this doe represents... Up to now, I've had to accept that adding the Guernsey genetics to my Saanen lines would cost me some milk production. It was just inevitable... But gaining the incredible Guernsey personality was worth it to me.
Now.... Now I get both... I can hopefully build a line of Saanseys with BOTH incredible personalities AND incredible production. It's my dream.

Thank you Sarah!! I am just over the moon...


** Sale note: I needed room in my barn for my Saansey milkers, so Ruth went to a dear friend of mine and I'll get babies back!

Updated 8/11/2025

Offspring

Save
1st Gen Saansey
Cricket
Doe (female)3 yrsWhite
Not for Sale
Save
1st gen Saansey
Duchess
Kid (female)1 yrWhite
Not for Sale
Save
British Guernsey
Guillaume
Buck (male)4 yrsGold
Sold
Save
1st gen Saansey
Prince
Buck (male)1 yrWhite
Not for Sale
© 2026 Openherd Terms Privacy
More info
List your animals

Openherd

We exist to help family farms be successful.

  • About Openherd
  • Herd Management
  • Marketplace
  • Websites
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Facebook page

Support

100% U.S.-based email and phone support!

  • Support & FAQ
  • Join Openherd
  • Plans & Pricing

Advertise

Advertising for farms, vendors, professionals, and corporate.

  • Advertise on Openherd
  • Advertising types, costs
  • Create an ad (account required)

How Openherd Works

Our system is easy, affordable, and effective:

  • Livestock Marketplace
  • Herd management
  • Farm website hosting
  • All managed in one place!
  • Learn more List your animals!

Website Hosting

The easiest farm website you'll ever have!

  • Websites
  • Website Designs
  • Domains, SSLs, Email
  • Ecommerce
  • Concierge Services
  • How to create your website
  • Why Openherd websites are best for farms