06.10.11
It’s very prevalent for healthy kid goats to display a condition where they start walking on the front of the front hooves. It can be intense with goats displaying bowed legs, walking almost on pasterns, buckling down over the knuckles, or bending back legs in at the hock joint toward the association so it looks like the leg is broken. If left alone, most of these problems will uplift with age, and within one or two weeks, the kid should be walking normally. If it is severe and doesn’t show recuperation within a few days, you can splint the leg, and it will usually clear up. Normally, this isn’t a genetic difficulty, but it can be inherited, usually through inbreeding.
You can make a splint with a speech depressor padded with cotton. Place it down the back of the leg and fasten it with electrical tape or veterinary elastic wrap. Wrap the tape-record several times around the hoof, above the pastern joint and up the leg. Do not wrap it too tensely: You’ll cut off the circulation. (A good guideline is to wrap it as tensely as you would your own ankle.) If using electrical tape, you can also put textile or gauze around the leg so the tape doesn’t paste to the hair.
Source: HobbyFarms.com