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pweber

pweber

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Joined
Mar 12, 2013
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145
Location
Maryland
I think the goats had been well trained. The homeowner had a company come in and take all the pine. One of the previous owners a few generations back had planted a stand of pine on about 10 acres. The loggers came in and took all the pine and left the locust and other hardwoods for us scroungers. Nice deal except for the fact that my arms are covered with poison sumac. Ouch. But worth it for a few truckloads of locust.
 
Guswhit

Guswhit

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Joined
Dec 4, 2012
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892
Location
Iowa
Now I don't personally like goats nor sheep for that matter, but I was cutting a few years ago on this farm that had sheep running around. The farmer would pasture them in different areas through out the year and the timber was absolutely clear as tall as the sheep could reach.
 
pweber

pweber

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Mar 12, 2013
Messages
145
Location
Maryland
Guswhit, I always thought it'd be nice to keep goats until I saw how they destroyed all the trees on one guy's property. They ate the bark off every tree up to about 5-6'. After that the trees died. Pasture land only for goats unless you WANT to kill off a forest.
 
Wood Doctor
Joined
Jan 10, 2008
Messages
12,565
Location
Omaha, Nebraska
I know if you have logs you want debarked, Just put them up about a foot or two off the ground and turn in some goats. they will strip every piece of bark they can get to. Logs will look like old bones in just a few days.
Imagine what they could do to moist cottonwood to hasten the drying process. I usually rely on bugs, sunlight, wind, and my own hands to remove the bark. Goats would be a hundred times more efficient.
 
Oldman47

Oldman47

ArboristSite Guru
Joined
Jan 29, 2015
Messages
644
Location
Forsyth, IL
Be careful feeding plant matter to livestock. A friend lost several cattle by feeding them hedge trimmings. He tossed plant material into their enclosure and the next day the cattle were dead. Even animals that process lots of vegetable matter cannot use all of it and worse yet each animal has different requirements.
 
Fred Wright

Fred Wright

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Joined
Feb 26, 2012
Messages
1,054
Location
Delaware, USA
Goats are living, walking lawn mowers. They'll eat pretty much anything. A buddy in upstate NY had a small herd on his farm, he'd leave 'em browse the yard sometimes. Never had to mow the grass.
 
zogger

zogger

Tree Freak
Joined
Nov 23, 2010
Messages
16,456
Location
North Georgia
I guess they can even eat poison ivy. Seen it on the news by me. They used them for a area at the Milwaukee zoo that had poison ivy.

I heard that too, and if you drink the goat milk from them when they been eating the PI, supposedly helps ya not get it severe or at all. Natural immunity then or something, but no idea if that is true or not.
 

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