Interview with the World's Best Weed Eater

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Medical care. I don't need health insurance, but I'd like to know you at least have a vet you can call.

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If I wanted to keep a goat in my yard, how high would the fence have to be?
We don't need much in the way of fencing. We like to stay in one place.

That's not what I've heard.
OK, you've got me. You know the old saying, 'If a fence won't hold water it won't hold a goat'? That's actually true. In fact, it's my motto.

I don't have a big enough yard to require a goat year-round. Would you be willing to work for an hourly wage?

Well, I have a pretty good deal here in my barnyard, but yes, there are people who rent out goats, so you can ask around. For large tracts of land, there are companies you can contract. In fact, the government hires goats to clear out noxious weeds in some of the Western states. I've heard some of those federal jobs are a pretty sweet deal.

Note from the editors: OK, you've got us. We didn't really interview a goat. But using goats to control weeds is no joke. You can learn more about ithere and here. Do you have more stories of goats and other weed-eating livestock? You can share them by posting a comment.

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Comments

  • D Williams 11/12/2008 1:41:19 PM

    We have several goats and they do a great job of clearing the weeds, however we are careful about where they roam as the neighbours lost some to poisonous plants - poison peach being one nasty. Fireweed can be eaten as goats are 20 times less susceptible as cattle to the poisonous alkaloid it contains, but the liver is still damaged in some way. Whilst I agree that goats are better than herbicides, I would suggest that the responsible goat owner look for info on these poisonous plants that grow in their area - and how to trim their hooves!!

  • T.S. LaBarre 10/16/2007 12:00:00 AM

    Love all I've read. Have a question: Is it ok for out little
    weed eaters to eat leaves from grapefruit and orange trees? Thanks
    for your time,T.S.

  • Jeannie Marcom 9/30/2007 12:00:00 AM

    maybe?

  • Rita Swaringen 7/16/2007 12:00:00 AM

    Bravo! One thing I would add is that you don't want to try to
    keep "A" goat. They are herd animals and need some kind of
    companion(s), but the beauty of them is they are not normally picky
    about who they hang with. I have kept them with dogs, horses,
    cattle. Another thing to keep in mind is that goats are browsers,
    like deer. First choice is bushes and trees, second is weeds. I've
    never had a problem with them eating anything that's toxic to them.
    Maybe they just don't eat enough at one time to bother them. Sorry
    to read about the stray pit bulls. Those are shot on sight in my
    neighborhood.

  • teresa edwards 7/16/2007 12:00:00 AM

    My daddy used to work with a man that had 3 goats. He brought
    them over to eat some honey suckle vines at the edge of the yard.
    These never got out of the yard and we didn't tie them or fence
    them in. The billy would see me and come in the yard so i could
    push on his head. He liked to push back but not butt. They all were
    just really pets and were interesting to someone 13 years
    old.

  • Mary Weaver 7/15/2007 12:00:00 AM

    I have 3 nubian goats and I love them. I have fresh milk every
    day. They eat the thistles down in my horse pasture and leave the
    grass for the horses. They are also wonderful pets with as much
    personality and playfulness as a puppy. Goats are good jumpers and
    a fence is nothing if the food and attention is better on the other
    side. That said, as long as they have a good supply of food, water,
    attention and play on the side of the fence you want them on, they
    will usually stay.

  • Carmen Klapperich 7/15/2007 12:00:00 AM

    We have 15 acres in middle Tennessee that we are rehabilitating
    from agricultural abuse. One year after I experienced my 4th poison
    ivy episode before April (!!) I got goats. Not only are goats good
    weedeaters but they are natural composters and fertilizer
    manufacturing plants. I use only wethers to avoid hormonal
    misbehavior. Right now I only have 2 boys but have had as many as
    4. As another person said they do tend to be homebodies, they seem
    to want to be able to see the house at all times. To get them to
    browse the meadows and woods we tether them to a riding lawn mower.
    The mower is too heavy for them to pull and we can move the goats
    easily when we see they've gotten bored with an area. Whatever they
    eat they seem to prefer the newest growth first. Only if forced to
    will they deign to eat older growth. On the occasions that they get
    loose from their tethers (or, in a weak moment, I let them range
    free) I end up going round and round with them about some of my
    landscape plants. They do love tree leaves so I protect newly
    planted saplings with individual fences. They love to eat my
    forsythia, lilac, and butterfly bushes. Interestingly they don't
    touch most of my wildflowers except for purple coneflower and
    Maxmillian sunflower. I had to dig up and give away 2 lovely
    red-twig dogwood shrubs because if able the goats would eat them
    down to the ground.

  • terri sullivan 7/15/2007 12:00:00 AM

    Thanks great tips and articles. terri

  • Hazel Watson 7/14/2007 12:00:00 AM

    Really cute story! And funny! Loved the part about the laundry
    and anonymity! I'm sorry I don't have any good stories about goats.
    I have one about Siamese cats, but that would be beside the point
    of Mother Earth News

  • chtank 7/14/2007 12:00:00 AM

    I hear that goat's milk is far more healthy than is cow's milk
    and I know goat's milk cheese is delicious. In fact, I do believe
    that MEN has run several stories on both the goat's milk and the
    making of goat's milk cheese.I hear, also, that goats make good
    pets, too, but not in the city, for land's sake, they need more
    room than the normal city back yard can provide. Besides, most
    city's have an ordinance against keeping livestock, it is a health
    issue. For city dwellers, better stick with dogs, cats and
    parrots.Now, what we need are stories about dwarf pigs and
    chickens. Back in the olden days in Oklahoma, we always had yard
    chickens which provided fresh eggs for breakfast and fired chicken
    for Sunday dinner.In fact, I used to help my dad control the egg
    production. He caught me throwing the cockerel eggs against the
    barn door to leave only hen's eggs. After all, he had told me that
    cockerel eggs were not good to eat.

  • James Smith 7/14/2007 12:00:00 AM

    We had a goat who ate everything but the weeds. The ivy was
    first to go, then tree leaves. The weeds would stay until we
    finally went out there with a gas weed eater, and then she would go
    into an eating frenzy, like she had been saving the weeds. She was
    a great animal, but unfortunately got into a box of Minute Rice,
    which swelled her up four times her size and killed her. Then we
    got a sheep, he did a better job, but choked to death on a plastic
    bag. Then I got chickens, and they scratched the place to bare
    dirt. Weeds don't even have a chance to get started. So they are
    forever my yard buddies. But I still miss that goat.

  • Chuck Kimberl 7/13/2007 12:00:00 AM

    I live just outside the Louisville, KY area. My wife and I have
    a very large goat operation. We would be a source if anyone wanted
    to rent a goat(s) for yard cleanup.

  • Esther Raichart 7/13/2007 12:00:00 AM

    I was wondering if you could tell me how big of an area that one
    weed eater will take care of? I am thinking I must have defective
    weed eaters, because mine have failed to keep my 3 1/2 acres eaten.
    It doesnt seem to matter how much or little I move them around,
    they are determined to only eat a set amount. I thought that 6 of
    them would be more than enough for my small space, but so far I am
    wrong. Maybe I should trade up for a better brand of weed eater? I
    bought mine, because they advertised as a multi purpose tool.
    (currently use Angora, they were touted as a wool factory.) So far
    the wool factory is pumping along, but not the weed eater end.
    Perhaps its too much to expect a muilti-purpose weed
    eater?

  • Trudi Dixon 7/13/2007 12:00:00 AM

    I had three Nigerian Dwarf goats in an acre pen, and it was
    borderline too many goats per acre. They ate the weeds great, but
    grass... not so much. I'd recommend running 2"x4" american wire
    with a strand of barbed wire along the bottom to discourage
    predators from digging underneath. Unfortunately, I didn't consider
    the barbed wire before two stray pit bulls came along. :(

  • Shirley 7/13/2007 12:00:00 AM

    Goats are great weed eaters - however, it's important to know
    that there are some plants that are toxic to goats - notably,
    mountain laurel here in the east. There are a few other shrubby
    plants tht don't agree with them, but I'm not sure what they are,
    only that they exist. You need to know what the goats are getting
    into.

  • Shirley 7/13/2007 12:00:00 AM

    Yes, goats are great weed eaters, but be careful, because some
    shrubby plants are toxic to goats, notably mountain laurel here in
    the east. I know that there are a few other plants that don't agree
    with goats, but can't remember what they are. Make sure you know
    what your goats are getting into.

  • FLORENCE MOWREY 7/13/2007 12:00:00 AM

    My experience has been with ponies rather than goats. They
    normally prefer grass, but we had one that developed a nightshade
    habit. Unhappily, that meant a night treating colic after the vet's
    visit. Mother had a remedy: she put us kids to work clearing out
    all the nightshade in about 6 acres of pastures. Daddy was always
    on the warpath against thistle. We had a lot of rosettes in the
    pasture so he used the same remedy: kids, hoe, wheelbarrow. One hot
    day we had the wheelbarrow half full of thistle wilting in the sun.
    When we came back from lunch there were three ponies standing at
    the barrow munching wilted thistles.

  • len buckholtz 7/13/2007 12:00:00 AM

    you could not be more on the button. really cute article.
    however, they did NOT mention what a nanny in heat will do or that
    they also eat rose bushes. lots and lots and lots of rosebushes.
    rose, thorns bark & all. and put the food in a rack or trough.
    'hits the floor, wont eat it no more'. ummmmm, i am visiting san
    diego at the moment. and we just had birria. :-)

  • B Oviatt 7/13/2007 12:00:00 AM

    Our goats are not fenced, and stay very close to home, i.e. the
    house. We have three 1/4 acres, and they keep the 1/4 acre down OK,
    but the 3, forget it! IF we want a certian area cleaned up, we have
    to fence them in it. Then they will eat it down to nothing,
    including stripping the bark off the trees! We offer christmas tree
    disposal service, because we feed them to our goats in the winter.
    We love our goats, and use the milk they provide. They're
    entertaining as well.(from the last frontier - Alaska)

  • Beverly Bridge 7/13/2007 12:00:00 AM

    I had a lot of brush and weeds that the horses wouldn't eat so I
    got a goat. She ate the hair of the horses tails and when she
    started on their manes I gave her away. Now I have sheep.

  • Linda Kay Behrend 7/13/2007 12:00:00 AM

    I have two Nigerian dwarf goats, members of my refuge family.
    They have a method to eating the pencil cactus that grows rampant
    in Texas fields: they nibble the needle spikes off first, then they
    go back for the meaty part. I couldn't believe it when I saw that
    the plant that I carefully avoid was gone! I LOVE my little
    goaties!

  • betty dillon 7/13/2007 12:00:00 AM

    AND you get the great company of the goats.... wouldn't trade
    mine for the world. They are intellegent, and kind.

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