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Utah Guard Enlists Help From ‘A Few Good Goats’
American Forces Press Service ^
| Sgt. 1st Class Jon Soucy, USANG
Posted on 07/28/2009 4:29:48 PM PDT by SandRat
CAMP WILLIAMS, Utah, July 28, 2009 When it comes to fighting wildfires, most people immediately think of water or fire retardant dropped from helicopters and other aircraft, or soot-covered firefighters using hoses and foam to battle back towering blazes.
 Jason Garn checks on his goats, which the Utah Army National Guard is using to create a firebreak on Camp Williams, near Salt Lake City. The goats have proven their worth during more than one fire season by consuming brush that would fuel wildfires. U.S. Army photo by Lt. Col. Hank McIntire (Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available. |
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Few people, however, think of goats as a firefighting tool, but goats are exactly what the Utah National Guard is using to lessen the potential of wildfires at this installation near Salt Lake City.
The Utah Guard has enlisted more than 1,200 goats and sheep to consume sagebrush and oak brush before this years fire season, said Sean Hammond, manager of the Utah Guard's Integrated Training Area. Less brush means less fuel for wildfires, he explained.
But contrary to popular belief, goats wont eat everything.
There are certain plants that they would just have to be starved to eat, said Doug Johnson, natural resources manager for the Utah Army National Guard. But theyll eat a lot of our heavy fuels pretty readily, like the sagebrush and the oak brush. And they do a great job dealing with those fields.
The goats were first introduced in 1999 as an experiment in cooperation with Utah State University, Hammond said. Two years later during a massive wildfire that spread through the camp, the goats proved their worth.
The goat firebreak had only been constructed a very short distance, Hammond said, but where it was constructed, the fire stopped, even when it jumped roads and other firebreaks.
In 2003, the goats were officially added to Camp Williams fire prevention plan and were used to construct more firebreaks. The Utah Guard has steadily increased the length of those areas over the past six years, and currently has about 10 miles of goat-cleared firebreaks, Hammond said.
The value of the goats efforts was proven again in 2006, when another major wildfire broke out on the camp.
The fire was driven by winds approaching 20 mph into twin, bulldozed firebreaks, Hammond said. The twin firebreaks held for between 10 and 15 minutes before the fire jumped the lines and raced uphill toward the camps northern boundary.
At that point, pushed by nearly 40 mph winds, the blaze neared the top of the ridge, when it hit the area cleared by the goats.
The fire line plowed into the goat firebreak and stopped, Hammond said. Personnel on the ridge at the time
remarked that had it not been for the goats, the fire would not have stopped at the ridgeline.
If the fire had not stopped there, Hammond explained, it most likely would have continued on to nearby housing developments.
The goats also have helped to clear Camp Williams of other unwanted items. In 2007, an unexploded artillery shell was found after the goats had cleared an area along the camps artillery impact area. Suspected to have been fired during training in the mid-1980s, the round sat unnoticed in heavy brush before the goats got to it.
"They eat [just about] everything down to stubble, said Army Lt. Col. Hank McIntire, the state public affairs officer. It makes it look like a wasteland. Once the area was cleared off by the goats, the round was easily seen."
A berm was built around the shell for safety, and an explosive ordnance disposal team destroyed the shell with an explosive charge. The wildfires of the previous year had come within 200 meters of the shell, McIntire said.
The goats success has strengthened ties with those who live near the camp, McIntire added. Plans are under way to increase the number of goat-built firebreaks. A planned extension is to be built along the western edge of the camp, and the Utah State Forestry and Fire Department will pick up the additions cost, Hammond said.
(Army Sgt. 1st Class Jon Soucy serves at the National Guard Bureau.)
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; US: Utah
KEYWORDS: goats; gurd
1
posted on
07/28/2009 4:29:48 PM PDT
by
SandRat
To: SandRat
There’s a disgusting joke in there somewhere.
2
posted on
07/28/2009 4:40:54 PM PDT
by
Jeff Chandler
(The President Who's Always Apologizing For America Couldn't Apologize For Himself)
To: SandRat
LOVE IT!
Simple and effective...the Goat Brigade.
3
posted on
07/28/2009 4:55:46 PM PDT
by
maine-iac7
("He has the right to criticize who has the heart to help" Lincoln)
To: SandRat
Some years ago, an airship company in California had the idea of making a fire-fighting airship. Its big advantages were that airships can haul very heavy loads of water; and that they can hover over their target, which matters, because they would usually not dump their entire load at once, but *rain* on the fire for a long time. It could also create barriers of moist foliage, that would significantly slow down a fire.
They had a practical design for such an airship, which would be able to fight all but the most violent forest fires—ones that created intense firestorms. Unfortunately they went out of business before they could make a prototype.
This is unfortunate, because I was hoping that the western States would by now have a small fleet of fire-fighting airships, that would each year save millions of dollars and many lives.
To: SandRat
Goats are also very good at controlling kudzu.
In fact they're the only thing short of bush-hogging and deep cultivation that will do the job. Spraying is pretty useless because it just grows back from the roots (which are huge and store a lot of energy). Goats just keep eating off the green and eventually starve the roots.
You just pen the goats at the center of the kudzu infestation and let them eat their way out.
5
posted on
07/28/2009 5:02:14 PM PDT
by
AnAmericanMother
(Ministrix of ye Chasse, TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary (recess appointment))
To: SandRat
Comfort women?
Lord forgive me for saying that, and I pray for he Pygmies in New Guinea.
6
posted on
07/28/2009 5:58:17 PM PDT
by
GreenLanternCorps
("Barack Obama" is Swahili for "Jimmy Carter".)
To: goat granny
7
posted on
07/28/2009 6:23:59 PM PDT
by
Fire_on_High
(One Big Ass Mistake America!)
To: Fire_on_High
Thanks for the ping & LOL...I loved this article..We had several pastures and would let my goats eat everything to a nub...lock them out and the alfalfa would grow again..They won't eat burdock or wild mustard...I chewed on a piece of wild mustard to see why they wouldn't eat it....(I am not too smart) It was bitter as hell, but when just young plants look like alfalfa. Didn't fool the goats, just the dumb human's taking care of them. When they were done with the pasture, we would go in an pull out the stuff they wouldn't eat...
With those damn rules in California about not clearing around your house cause there might be an endangered weed, they should get together and buy a small flock of goats.
Thanks again :O)
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