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Webmaster
06-13-2007, 11:20 PM
Critters grow popular in city as cheap, chemical-free way to clear vegetation
By COLIN McDONALD
P-I REPORTER

In 24 hours, the goats reduced a bed of ivy to a mat of bare vines. They riddled the once-imposing blackberry thicket with tunnels.

In less than four days, the invasive plants would be vanquished, allowing sunlight to stream through the vacant lot next to the King County Metro bus depot in Bellevue.

With their four-chambered stomachs and insatiable desire to nibble on anything even resembling a plant, goats have gained credibility as land clearers among Seattle-area government agencies and private developers.

"Getting them to accept it is always the hardest part," said Craig Madsen, an Eastern Washington rancher who's part of the urban trend. His rentable herd of 270 Boer and Spanish goats has never been more in demand.

Skeptics, he's found, quickly become converts. Once the hooves hit the ground, few can question the tenacity of these ruminants to devour unwanted foliage.

"It was unbelievable," said John Iwanczuk, a project manager for Saltaire Construction in Seattle. "We've been in the business for 25 years -- we're skeptical about everything. But not only did it reach our objective, we saved a pile of money and made incredible inroads with the neighborhood."

Bringing goats into the city to do what they do best has its advantages: They're cheaper than manual laborers, chemical-free and popular with parents and children. Even the critters' droppings are in demand.

Last month, Iwanczuk was faced with a steep quarter-acre lot on Dearborn Street covered with impenetrable brush. He figured it would take a crew at least a week to clear the lot, filling eight to10 trucks with waste.

When a real estate broker suggested goats, Iwanczuk agreed to give it a try. His colleagues laughed -- at first.

Four days and 60 goats later, the blackberry vines and Scotch broom were gone, and Iwanczuk had risen to neighborhood hero status. Elementary school groups came to watch and pet the goats as they dozed on the sidewalk. Moms brought freshly baked cookies. Local gardeners lusting for free fertilizer scooped the lot clean of droppings.

Iwanczuk estimates he saved $6,000 to $9,000 on the job.

Madsen charges $450 a day for the goats, a $250 transportation fee and extra for setting up their fencing.

"They are just eating machines," said Tammy Dunakin, who runs Rent-A-Ruminant on Vashon Island and contracted with Iwanczuk. "They suck down blackberry vines like it was spaghetti. I don't understand it, (but) the thorns don't bother them at all."

Metro joined Seattle City Light and Seattle Parks and Recreation this year on a growing list of goat-hiring public agencies. The trend started in the early 1990s in Los Angeles County, where goats were found to be an effective tool for clearing underbrush on fire-prone hillsides. That practice spread to parts of the Sierra Nevada and the Oakland, Calif., hills.

"It's common as sin," said Frank Pinkerton, who recently retired from Langston University in Oakland, where he researched the use of goats for weed and brush control.

In some places, such as Chattanooga, Tenn., and Appalachian trails, the animals are being used to combat invasive species, Pinkerton said.

When it comes to steep slopes covered in blackberry vines, goats are faster and cheaper than human crews or heavy equipment. Goats can't compete with herbicides for speed but can work in wetlands and along stream banks with minimal threat to water quality or salmon habitat. If allowed to return to an area for a couple of years, they can almost entirely remove English ivy, Scotch broom and blackberries, Madsen said.

"Those little buggers really did clear away a good part of the bank," said Suzanne Hartman of City Light, which used goats last year to clear brush from around the North Substation in the Roosevelt neighborhood. "You could finally see the fence."

City Light Superintendent Jorge Carrasco saw goats being used near San Francisco before he came to Seattle and quickly approved the idea when his maintenance staff proposed it. The goats will be returning to the Roosevelt site later this summer to finish the work.

Both Madsen and Dunakin, who started their separate rent-a-goat businesses less than five years ago, are now booked months in advance.

Dunakin leaves her island farm once a month for work in Seattle, while Madsen spends five months a year touring Western Washington in a semi with a 30-foot double-deck trailer. Both say demand is being fueled by the growth of the "green" building industry.

Accompanied by their border collies, the goatherds are with their critters 24 hours a day when on city jobs. They sleep in their trucks. Madsen has a guard dog to protect his goats from coyotes on rural assignments.

"But when I'm in the city, I worry about people," he said.

Last month, 15 goats were shot near Oakland while they were clearing land for fire protection.

So far, Madsen and Dunakin have had no such urban problems. After setting up an electric fence to keep the goats from straying, they have little to do but keep watch over the herd and answer questions posed by curious neighbors.

"I read a lot," Madsen said.

As for the goats, "As long as there is plenty to eat, they're happy."


GOAT FACTS

Bet you didn't know:

A goat's pupils are rectangular.

Their average life span is eight to 12 years.

Worldwide, meat and milk from goats are consumed more than the meat and milk from cows.

Goats can eat up to 8 pounds of green foliage a day.

Sources: Ohio State University, American Boer Goat Association


source: http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/319789_goats14.html?source=rss

Webmaster
07-12-2007, 09:26 AM
Goats put to work on UW's Bothell campus
P-I STAFF

BOTHELL -- Goats will be doing yard work at the University of Washington's Bothell campus this week.

The university is bringing in the animals as an environmentally friendly way to control weeds. It joins Seattle City Light and King County in the use of goats to remove weeds without pesticides or the use of fuel-powered equipment.

Goats from Vashon-based Rent-A-Ruminant will be on campus this week. Other goats from Edwall-based Healing Hooves will come to campus later this summer. The university said it is considering housing its own goats full time.


from: http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/323393_localbriefs12.html?source=rss

Webmaster
09-02-2007, 09:03 AM
By Sharon Pian Chan
Seattle Times staff reporter

In what he is calling one small step for sustainability, City Councilmember Richard Conlin wants to legalize miniature goats in Seattle.

His proposal, which extols the goats for their "friendliness, faithfulness and hardy constitution," would permit pygmy goats as licensed pets. Minigoats, according to Conlin, have many positive qualities as human companions, weed eaters and a source of dairy products and natural fertilizer.

"They are already a common pet, and they have some sustainability benefits in that you can grow your own milk and cheese," said Phyllis Shulman, legislative assistant for Conlin, who is out of town. "Some of these are small sustainability steps. Richard thinks it's the small and big things in sustainability that add up."

Until now, the Seattle City Council and Conlin have mostly talked about sustainability in terms of recycling, composting and protecting city trees. But goats are in — especially as Earth-friendly lawn mowers. The University of Washington recently hired a herd of full-size goats to eat blackberry bushes and English ivy.

Conlin's proposal would make a different breed of goat part of city living. About the size of a large dog, pygmy goats grow up to 24 inches tall and weigh 50 to 100 pounds. Portland and Everett already have granted residents the right to these ruminants.

The proposed law, which Conlin plans to discuss at a public hearing Sept. 18, points out that goat hair "is a renewable source of fiber," and that "numerous cultures worldwide keep goats, and more people worldwide drink goat milk than any other animal's."

A Madrona resident who keeps minigoats approached Conlin after her neighbors asked the city to investigate whether the pets posed a danger to public health. The woman has been allowed to keep her goats temporarily, pending the outcome of Conlin's proposal.

Under current land-use code, farm animals cannot be kept on lots smaller than 20,000 square feet. The new law would classify minigoats as a small animal rather than a farm animal, and it would require that they be licensed, just like dogs, cats, exotic animals and potbellied pigs.

Although goats can be trained to walk on leashes, they would have to be confined to an owner's property or other property where permission has been given for the minigoats to roam. That way, Shulman said, they won't eat neighborhood or park plants.

"We're not going to have goat off-leash areas," she said.

Conlin's office researched health issues and said the disease risk is low. Some goats, however, smell bad.

An unneutered male "does tend to have a smell about him," said Ray Hoyt, president of the National Pygmy Goat Association. He described it as "musky." Male goats would have to be neutered, under the proposed law, and all goats would have to be dehorned, a practice Shulman called common.

Minigoats are friendlier than dogs, said Hoyt, who lives in Minden, Nev. "They wag their tails and come and meet you, and they know their names."

He said the goats are outside animals but need shelter to keep them dry. Minigoats, which start at $100 each, do better in pairs and herds than alone, he said.

"They do real well interacting with others," he said. "They play and butt heads with each other, and play king of the mountain and do goat things."

source: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003865090_minigoats02m.html

Webmaster
09-25-2007, 08:16 AM
By Sharon Pian Chan
Seattle Times staff reporter

Thanks to the work of the Goat Justice League, ruminants now have the right to life and limited liberty in Seattle.

On Monday, the City Council acknowledged the miniature goat's attributes as human companion, weed whacker and milk maker, and unanimously voted that the goats could be kept as pets.

"One small step for man, one giant step for goatkind," said Councilmember Richard Conlin, who sponsored the legislation.

As of late, goats have gained the environmental status of hybrid cars and bovine-growth-hormone-free milk, prized for their ability to mow lawns without using fossil fuels. University of Washington and Seattle City Light recently hired herds to clear slopes of blackberry brambles.

Monday's vote marked yet another gain for miniature goats, which are about the size of a large dog. Also known as pygmy or dwarf goats, the animals weigh between 50 and 100 pounds and grow to about 2 feet tall. Owners keep them as pets and sources of milk.

People who want to keep goats will have to license them like a dog or cat and get them dehorned. Male goats must be neutered — the unaltered male gives off a musky scent that some find offensive, goat experts say. To protect sidewalk gardens and park vegetation, goats will not be allowed in off-leash areas or anywhere outside the owner's yard, with an exception: They can be lent to other owners to graze in their yards. Portland and Everett have passed legislation legalizing the goats.

Under the previous land-use code in Seattle, farm animals could not be kept on lots smaller than 20,000 square feet.

The law passed Monday classifies minigoats as small animals rather than farm animals, and the new licensing requirement treats them like dogs, cats, exotic animals and potbellied pigs.

Jennie Grant, a Madrona resident and outlaw goat owner, asked Conlin's office to consider changing the old law after a neighbor alerted the city to Grant's goats and complained about potential public-health risks. Grant is president of the Goat Justice League, which she says has 100 members.

Her goats, Brownie and Snowflake, "are happy, they have each other, they have enough space to do the things goats like to do," Grant said at a public hearing. "Every day they harvest blackberry bushes. Every day Snowflake gives a half gallon of delicious milk. I make cheese and I bring it to the neighbors."

After researching the health risks and finding they were low, Conlin said, he proposed the new law because the goats can provide local milk and serve as "another link to the reality of where food comes from."

Animal lovers, advocates of urban sustainability and children testified in favor of legalizing the goats at the hearing Thursday. One person criticized the change, saying goats can escape any enclosure and they prefer to eat roses.

Grant sees a pastoral future for Seattle populated with minianimals. "We would be a really charming city if we were a place people could keep minifarms with chickens, goats, a vegetable garden and fruit trees," she said.

At her home, Snowflake and Brownie seemed oblivious to the legal reprieve. In fact, they seemed much more interested in a reporter's notebook that was just out of their reach.

Grant also handed out tips on raising minigoats: Build a 5-foot fence and a rain shelter, keep at least two goats, do not tether them and do not keep them indoors. Seattle Tilth plans to provide classes on goat-keeping, she said.

Councilmember Peter Steinbrueck said there was more to be done. "Why stop there? Why not sheep, llamas ... ? I think there is an argument that there are greater heights to be achieved with urban sustainability."

from: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003900621_minigoats25m.html