Months before the first snow beckons skiers, sheep and goats are hitting the slopes in Vermont. As the AP reports, dozens of animals have been mowing down overgrown vegetation at Jay Peak near the Canadian border. They're expected to clear 25 acres over a five-week stint, an experiment officials say is worth a try on part of the 300 acres that need to be mowed. The goal is to gradually reduce the reliance on gas-powered mechanical mowers. "This year has proven that it can be done and be done successfully," says Andy Stenger, director of mountain and base area operations. "They're great employees. They take a lot of lunch breaks, but that's kind of the idea."
The animals wear collars that emit a noise if they get too close to an invisible fence and deliver a mild shock if they cross the barrier. The collars also send data to the herd's owner, Adam Ricci of Cloud Brook Grazing. "I can see where they're spending most of their time. And I also get a heads up if there's sick animals," he says. Using livestock for landscaping isn't new. More than 25 years ago, a New Hampshire electric company used 1,000 sheep to clear vegetation under power lines. In 2010, the University of Georgia brought in goats to control an invasive plant overtaking a section of campus. And the Nashville Chew Crew, a herd of sheep, has been working for the city's parks department since 2017.
Ricci says his goats and sheep spent a busy summer cleaning up backyards, reclaiming abandoned farmland, gobbling up poison ivy and removing invasive species from the grounds of a retirement community. "Ideally, we can scale this up to the point where it's working well and then hopefully develop a model that can be used at other ski resorts as well," he says. "But there's still a lot to learn here."
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Goatscaping reduces the carbon footprint of vegetation control, reduces erosion, and increases a site's capacity to hold water, Ricci says. The cost per acre is similar to that for mechanical mowing, though he acknowledges the animals are slow. "Conventional methods, they're covering this whole entire site in about 10 days," he says. "So these guys work significantly slower than weed whackers do." But employees and visitors at Jay Peak have enjoyed the friendly herd, Stenger says. "It's a lot of fun to have them on the mountain," he says.