Weeds got your goat?

Filed under: Agriculture, Ranching — Rebecca Clarren at 11:02 am on Friday, May 9, 2008
Rebecca Clarren

Rebecca Clarren

I hate to mow the lawn. My yard spans a hill and cutting the grass with the electric mower I borrow from the neighbors is some strange hybrid of yoga and modern dance. (Flick the yellow power cord to the left over my shoulder, now to the right, under my leg.) My neighbor Allison, the one who so kindly lends me her mower has a solution: a neighborhood goat. We could all keep the goat for a week at a time and then, at the end of the summer, we’d slaughter and grill her up for one fantastic neighborhood block party.

The BBQ-part aside, using goats in lieu of lawn mowers or insecticides is gaining traction all over the West. For several years, Wilsonville, Ore. has hired a herd of 450 grazers to chomp down invasive plants at city parks. Clackamas County, not far from Portland, has used goats to manage weeds near reservoirs. This past May, the Getty Museum in Los Angeles hired several dozen goats (and a goatherd and a few dogs) to chew up the flammable brush around its 110-acre hillside. Ranchers in New Mexico have used hundreds of goats to eat and kill off tamarisk.

Claudia Ingham, a doctorate in rangeland ecology and management at Oregon State University, is studying the impact of grazing on landscapes rife with invasive English ivy. So far her results indicate that goats are the most effective at controlling the ivy so that native plants have space to flourish.

Using insecticides and fuel-powered mowers increasingly make little sense with raising gas prices and data about the impacts of toxic chemicals on humans and the environment. Call your local officials and get them to hire a flock of goats. It’s an idea that should take root.

7 Comments »

Comment by Mark Wright

May 9, 2008 @ 11:56 pm

California in particular would benefit by grazing the chapparel lands rather than letting em scorch a few towns every year.

Any kind of grazer is a naturally good grazer in the USA. Goats and sheep say rotated with cattle really help keep the fire hazard in check. Also they produce meat and wool while performing that fire control service.

Rebbecca…you and the neighbor, get 3 or 4 of em ( one needs to be a young billy )…keep one doe over the winter to have kids the next year.

Say a 2 or 3 goat barbeque then in the fall…Nice sized neighborhood party, or freeze a bunch to enjoy over the winter.

g

Comment by goattrails

May 11, 2008 @ 8:44 am

Respectfully I disagree. I keep my brush and weeds down with goats too. However they do not get butchered they
are out and about whenever the weather permits and in the deep winter are cozy in the barn.

When are we going to stop exploiting animals for our own selfish purposes? Yet another symptom of the throw away mentality. How sad for you.
goattrails

Comment by mm

May 12, 2008 @ 4:43 pm

I have to agree with goattrails.

I’m from the Bay Area of California where some people employ goats to help with brush and weeds, esp. in the East Bay. These goats can become a part of the family, even in more urban environments such as Oakland.

I don’t get the quick-to-kill environmentalist.? Goats are great and you don’t have to eat them to benefit from them.

Comment by Cassity Bromley

May 13, 2008 @ 3:16 pm

Bighorn Canyon National Rec. area is using about 1,500 goats as part of a weed control program. One word of caution though: Like domestic sheep, goats spread disease to bighorn sheep and can cause large die offs, so domestic goats are NOT a good choice in or near bighorn sheep habitat!

Comment by Maggie

June 5, 2008 @ 2:49 pm

I am interested in hiring some goats to clear some land I have. Any ideas of services in Northern California, Bay Area that do this?

Comment by Jane

June 6, 2008 @ 4:24 pm

Just so you know…goats are browsers and prefer to eat shrubs, tree leaves and brushy plants such as thistle and wild roses. They will selectively eat tall spears of grass, but that’s about it. There are commercial goat weed managers (”Ewephoric” out of Wyoming is one, if they are still around), who use portable fences to concentrate goats into small areas and move the fencing each day until the area is cleared.

Goats are lively, friendly creatures who make great outdoor companions.Their droppings are pellets that make good fertilizer, and their sharp hooves break up the soil to allow seed germination. But if you get some be sure to get at least two–goats are herd animals who get desperately lonely without at least one companion, and they’ll let you know with their plaintive bleeting!

Comment by sarah traube

July 8, 2008 @ 10:40 pm

Does anyone have the name or tel.no of the goat man who apparently hangs out around Dublin/Pleasanton, as I need him urgently for some land that needs clearing. Thank you.

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