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Glossary›Goat Yoga

Glossary

Goat Yoga

A contemporary wellness practice combining traditional yoga postures with the presence of free-roaming goats, founded in 2016 as a form of animal-assisted therapy and joyful distraction.

What is Goat Yoga?

Goat yoga is a contemporary movement practice that integrates conventional hatha yoga postures with the unscripted presence of free-roaming goats, typically kids (baby goats) or young adults. Participants practice yoga sequences—often gentle vinyasa flows or basic asanas—while goats wander among practitioners, climb onto their backs during poses, or seek attention and physical contact. The practice emerged not from ancient lineages or spiritual texts, but from modern therapeutic needs and the recognition of goats’ capacity to induce joy, laughter, and present-moment awareness.

Unlike traditional yoga styles that emphasize stillness, breath control, or meditative absorption, goat yoga explicitly welcomes interruption and playfulness. The presence of curious, unpredictable animals creates an environment where perfection is impossible and laughter is inevitable—a deliberate contrast to the often-serious atmosphere of contemporary studio yoga.

Origins & Lineage

Goat yoga was created in 2016 by Lainey Morse, a farm owner in Albany, Oregon, following her diagnosis with an autoimmune disease and during a divorce. Morse had been hosting informal “Goat Happy Hour” gatherings on her farm, where visitors spent time with her six goats as a form of stress relief. When yoga instructor Heather Davis suggested combining yoga with these animal interactions, Morse hosted the first goat yoga class on her property.

Morse documented the first class and sent photographs to Modern Farmer magazine. The publication quickly featured the story, catalyzing viral media attention in spring 2016. Within months, goat yoga was featured in CNN, The New York Times, Time Magazine, The Wall Street Journal, NPR, and BBC. By 2017, the phenomenon had spawned over 500 independent goat yoga businesses worldwide, from Australia to Switzerland, creating what industry observers estimate as a $10+ million global sector.

Morse founded Original Goat Yoga™ as a licensed business model with multiple locations across the United States. The practice coincided with the 2016 U.S. presidential election cycle, when many seekers craved what Morse termed “happy distraction” from anxiety and daily stress.

There is no connection to classical yoga lineages, ancient texts, or guru-disciple transmission. Goat yoga represents a distinctly 21st-century American innovation within the broader category of animal-assisted therapy and agritourism.

How It’s Practiced

Goat yoga classes typically occur in outdoor settings: barns, pastures, fenced fields, or covered farm pavilions. Sessions last 30–60 minutes and accommodate 15–30 participants who bring or rent yoga mats. Classes are led by certified yoga instructors who guide practitioners through accessible sequences—sun salutations, warrior poses, downward dog, child’s pose, and seated stretches.

Between 6–15 goats (usually kids aged 6 weeks to 2 years) roam freely throughout the session. Goats may climb onto practitioners’ backs during plank or table-top positions, nibble hair or clothing, nuzzle for attention, or simply rest on unoccupied mats. Instructors teach modified flows that account for these interruptions; holding poses becomes more challenging when a 15-pound goat leaps onto your spine.

Participants are instructed to honor the animals’ agency—no pushing goats away, accepting that defecation and urination may occur on or near mats, and recognizing that practitioners occupy the goats’ space rather than vice versa. The practice deliberately prioritizes animal interaction over yogic precision. Many attendees are first-time yoga practitioners drawn by the novelty of goats rather than interest in asana.

The physical sensation includes the pressure of small hooves on the back (described as a light massage), the warmth of goat bodies, and frequent laughter that disrupts breath patterns and concentration—effects antithetical to classical yoga but central to goat yoga’s therapeutic premise.

Goat Yoga Today

Goat yoga is primarily encountered through:

  • Farm-based classes: Seasonal offerings (often spring when kids are born) at small farms, sanctuaries, and homesteads. Classes typically cost $30–$45 per session and sell out weeks in advance.
  • Corporate wellness programs: Businesses book goat yoga for team-building events, stress reduction initiatives, and employee appreciation activities.
  • Festivals and pop-up events: Temporary installations at wellness festivals, farmers markets, and outdoor gatherings.
  • Licensed Original Goat Yoga™ locations: Franchised sites operating under Morse’s trademarked business model.

Searching “goat yoga near me” typically yields multiple local options in suburban and rural areas with agricultural infrastructure. Urban adaptations exist but are logistically complex. Classes book rapidly; some farms maintain waiting lists spanning months.

The practice has expanded to include “Goat Happy Hour” (yoga-free goat interaction), goat meditation sessions, and hybrid events combining goats with other animals (chickens, alpacas, miniature horses).

Common Misconceptions

Goat yoga is not traditional yoga. It shares vocabulary (asana names, Sanskrit terms like “namaste”) and physical forms with hatha yoga, but lacks connection to Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras, pranayama practice, or any established yoga lineage. It is fundamentally animal-assisted recreation rather than spiritual practice.

It is not primarily a workout. While participants perform physical postures, classes are gentler and more interrupted than studio yoga. The primary benefit is psychological (joy, laughter, stress relief) rather than strength-building or flexibility enhancement.

Goats are not trained therapy animals. Unlike service dogs or horses in formal animal-assisted therapy, yoga goats receive no specialized training. They behave according to natural caprine curiosity and social instincts. The “therapy” emerges from their unselfconscious playfulness, not learned behaviors.

Not all goat yoga businesses are affiliated. “Original Goat Yoga™” is Morse’s trademarked brand. The majority of goat yoga offerings worldwide are independent operations using the generic concept without licensing.

How to Begin

To experience goat yoga:

  1. Search locally: Use online searches for “goat yoga” plus your region, or visit goatyoga.net to find affiliated and independent providers.
  2. Expect seasonal availability: Most classes run March–October when weather permits outdoor practice and baby goats are available.
  3. Dress practically: Wear clothes you don’t mind getting dirty, remove jewelry, and bring a mat you can wash (or rent on-site).
  4. Release expectations: Approach the experience as play rather than serious practice. Expect to laugh, be interrupted, and potentially have a goat urinate near your mat.
  5. No yoga experience required: Classes accommodate absolute beginners; the instructor provides modifications and the goats ensure no one takes themselves too seriously.

For those interested in the therapeutic rationale rather than the practice itself, Lainey Morse has shared her story through hundreds of media appearances and speaking engagements focusing on resilience, rural entrepreneurship, and the mental health benefits of human-animal connection.

Related terms

vinyasamindfulness based stress reductionqigongtai chipilateswim hof
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