Goats Hired to Mow Portland Lot


Story From The Oregonian

About 50 were brought in to clear weeds from a two-acre urban lot, drawing hundreds of passers-by to stop for a peek, offer a hand-picked weed or pet the animals through a chain-link fence.

"I think one of the things that struck me was how starved people are for nature," said Quigley, who lives a few blocks away. "And this is kind of like bringing nature to us."

Vancouver real estate agency Killian Pacific had Goat Rental NW of Damascus deliver the animals. The idea came from Brett Milligan, a landscape architect, who was hired by Killian to tend the lot.

"They've been out here two weeks," Milligan said. "I thought things would kind of die down in terms of public interest, but it hasn't at all."

Milligan liked the idea of avoiding gas-powered mowers. But because Killian would agree only if it didn't have to pay extra, Milligan offered to count the goats and refill their water buckets for free.

"I'm getting paid in personal satisfaction," Milligan said with a laugh. "I was very interested in alternative practices, things you could make happen in the city. "

Georgina Stiner, president of Goat Rental NW, said using goats instead of lawn mowers is hardly new, but she's finding a growing interest in urban areas.

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"We've had jobs off Powell Boulevard, a lot where there's a lot of construction where they can't really bring a weed wacker in," said Stiner, who started her business nearly one year ago and owns 170 goats that came mostly from shelters.

Lisa Walker, property manager for FC Services, LLC., which manages land for Killian Pacific, said that besides being green, the goats have a side benefit: "The digestive system of the goat actually causes the seeds to be sterile," she said. "Next year, we won't have as many weeds."

The lot was once home to a warehouse and the Monte Carlo and Lido restaurants. The buildings, vacant by then, burned down in 2002. Killian plans to develop the site after the economy improves, Walker said.

Meanwhile, the goats will stick around until Friday, guarded at night by security guards and frequent visits by Portland police officers, Stiner said.

Tuesday afternoon, 19-month-old Gwynedd Foulke, visiting with parents David Foulke and Jessica Goin, watched with wide eyes as she held pieces of long grass toward a small goat.

"We kind of expect the unexpected in Southeast Portland," Foulke said.

Walker said Killian Pacific will look to bring the goats back in the spring.

"We haven't finished the experiment yet, but I would definitely try it again next year," she said.

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ODOT Partners with Oregon Toxics Alliance to Reduce Pesticides


BLACHLY, Ore. -- Several groups disagree with the Bureau of Land Management's use of pesticides to control Oregon's weed problem.

One of them, the Oregon Toxics Alliance, set out Wednesday to do something about it.

Partnering with ODOT, members hit the road to knock out invasive species the old fashioned way.

For most people, pulling weeds is the last thing they want to spend their free time doing.

"We're basically just clipping flowers and seed heads so they're not reproducing," said Yotokko Kilpatrick, Walama Restoration Project Operational Director.

But for crew from the Walama Restoration Project, clipping the knapweed is better than the alternative, which could be more common now that Oregon is expanding the list of pesticides that can be used across the state.

They say that move will only hurt the people who live around it as well as the wildlife.

"Certain folks have a chemical sensitivity in the community. We also have salmon fisheries out here as well, so this is a non-toxic approach," Kilpatrick said.

The Oregon Toxics Alliance partnered with ODOT on an eight-mile stretch of land in Blachly.

"We're hoping this will be a model for more green rural economic development," said Lisa Arkin, Oregon Toxics Alliance.

It's a pilot project for now. Arkin says ODOT kicked off the project with the promise to reduce its use of pesticides by 60 percent along Highway 36, and at the same put people back to work.

"We're hoping to employ people who had jobs in natural resource areas perhaps as loggers and fisherman who can't find work," Arkin said.

The Oregon Toxics Alliance is seeking funds to expand the project and employ more Oregon residents.

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