British Guernsey
British Guernsey is a dairy goat breed developed in Britain using Golden Guernsey ancestry, usually with selection toward a larger, more angular milking animal than the original island type. It remains closely associated with the warm golden, cream, fawn, or bronze coat colors of Guernsey goats, often with a soft expression, upright ears, and a moderate frame. Some registries treat British Guernsey separately from Golden Guernsey, so the name can signal both color heritage and a particular breeding route.
These goats are popular in small dairy herds and family milk settings where moderate production, manageable size, and calm handling are valued. They still need the same practical care as other dairy goats: good forage, balanced minerals, clean housing, and careful feeding through late pregnancy and lactation. Because golden color alone does not make a good milker, prospective owners should look at udder shape, feet, milk records, and kidding history. Breeders working with rare Guernsey lines also watch inbreeding and avoid diluting the traits that separate them from general golden crossbreds.
Colors: Belted, Black, Black and White, Brown, Brown and White, Buckskin, Chamoisee, Cou Blanc, Cou Clair, Cream, Cream with White Points, Dark Fawn, Dark Gold, Fawn, Gold, Golden, Honey Brown, Light Fawn, Light Gold, Mixed Gold and Cream, Mixed Gold and Fawn, Moonspotted, Pinto, Red, Red and White, Roan, Spotted, Sundgau, Swiss Marked, Tan, Tan with White Points, White