Finnish Landrace
The Finnish Landrace goat, known in Finland as the Suomenvuohi or Finnish goat, is the country's native domestic goat. It is a hardy northern dairy landrace rather than a narrowly uniform show breed, with small to medium size, active browsing habits, and a useful udder for household milk. Coats may be white, black, brown, gray, pied, or mixed, and both horned and polled animals occur. The breed reflects long selection under Finnish farm conditions, including short grazing seasons and cold winters.
Finnish Landrace goats fit small dairies, homesteads, and conservation herds where resilience is valued alongside milk. Winter management is central: dry bedding, ventilation without drafts, good hay, browse branches when available, and unfrozen water help them maintain condition. During the grazing season they make efficient use of rough pasture, but they still need parasite monitoring and secure fencing. Breeders working with this landrace usually try to preserve broad family lines and practical traits instead of narrowing the population around a single color or production extreme.
Colors: Belted, Black, Black and White, Brown, Brown and White, Buckskin, Chamoisee, Cou Blanc, Cou Clair, Cream, Fawn, Gold, Moonspotted, Pinto, Red, Red and White, Roan, Spotted, Sundgau, Swiss Marked, Tan, White