Goats:
The Low-Tech Weed Killers
California,
Nov. 13 2002 (VOA News) -- In California's agriculture-intensive
Central Valley, controlling weeds is a top priority.
But chemical herbicides can't always be applied safely,
especially near lakes, streams or irrigation canals.
Now, the government and farmers are studying an environmentally
friendly and decidedly low-tech way to clear unwanted
foliage from private and public lands.
Gayle
Roberts loads her border collie "Fly" in
the back of her pickup truck, and leaves her ranch
to oversee a new facet of the business she runs with
her husband, clearing large tracts of land of unwanted
growth. Ms. Roberts doesn't use mowers, weed eaters
or other mechanical devices to get rid of underbrush,
bushes, and weeds. Nor does she spread herbicide to
kill them. Her method is decidedly 'low tech.'
Land
clearing and brush clearing with goats is done quite
a bit in California. It's an ecologically sensible
way to do it.
On
this day, while "Fly" supervises, the Roberts'
goats are disposing of some leaves, twigs and underbrush
on a bank of the Mokelumne River near Lockeford. The
herd is part of a project at the Lockeford Plant Materials
Center, which is operated by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture.
"When
you're walking down the river we have quite a bit
of invasive species that have just overtaken our river
frontage," says USDA agronomist Tish Espinosa.
Ms.
Espinosa is coordinating the project. She says the
government needed to do something so agriculture and
fish and wildlife agents could get closer to rivers
like the Mokelumne. She said the thick growth on the
banks kept the agents at bay.
"We
were thinking of a way to get rid of the blackberries
and some of the other plants and we're looking out
there thinking 'what could we use?' We don't want
to go in there with equipment because we don't know
the topography of the levee bank. We don't know where
it drops, cuts, you know, because we can't see it,"
she said.
Not
all goats will consistently eat blackberries and all
of the other unwanted undergrowth. So Ms. Espinosa
began selectively breeding a herd that would eat any
plant, including razor-sharp thorns and poison oak.
"Some
goats are just made to be fed hay and grain and kept
in a yard where they're kind of pampered. Where other
goats need to be more rugged and out there eating,
surviving on stems and sticks and leaves and just
forage for their food," Ms. Espinosa said.
Ms.
Espinosa says over the past year, the herd has been
honed from 130 to 75 of the most ravenous goats.
At
the river, the goats are fenced in so they don't wander
off and fall prey to predators or dine on crops or
plants they're not supposed to eat. It's obvious they've
done their job well. Even though there's still plenty
of growth left, there are many places with a clear
view of the river, and a path leading to it.
Karen
Terrill of the California Department of Forestry and
Fire Protection says the goats could also be used
to clear underbrush around homes in forested areas,
thus reducing the possibility of wildfires. "Using
grazing animals is one good way to make fire safe,
especially if it's on a steep slope that's difficult
to get to with a weed eater or mechanical device,"
Ms. Terrill said.
But
not everyone likes the idea of using goats to clear
land. Carl Zechella of the California Sierra Club
says ravenous goats can leave damage in their wake.
"Some
of these goats might escape somewhere and get into
wilderness areas or national parks or places that
have sensitive environments and basically eat anything
because they've been bred to eat basically anything
and everything," Mr. Zechella said.
Mr.
Zechella says goats often figure out a way to escape
from fenced areas. Ms. Roberts and Ms. Espinosa agree,
saying left unattended, goats can wreck havoc. They
emphasize that such projects have to be closely monitored
to ensure the goats only eat what they're supposed
too.
They
say the advantages of using goats to clear land of
unwanted foliage far outweigh the disadvantages. It
appears the goats would agree.
-- Bob Hensley - Voice of America
in California
-- Reprinted with the
permission of Voice of America
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