Dana McGregor says he takes his goats everywhere, including the beach. McGregor decided earlier this week to to put his furry friends on a surf board together to see if how well they could handle the waves. (July 12)
Chicago's O'Hare Airport turns to herd of goats and llamas to clear airfield brush
Associated Press
Aug.
13, 2013: A group of journalists gathers in a remote corner of O'Hare
International Airport, far from its high-profile modernization mega
project. (AP)
CHICAGO – In a remote corner of
O'Hare International Airport, far from its high-profile modernization
mega project, a decidedly more low-tech initiative is being carried out
by a barnyard band of goats, sheep, llamas and wild burros.
The mission of the roughly two dozen animals: to mow the grass. And lots of it.
O'Hare is one of the largest airports in the world and takes its
environmental initiatives to serious and sometimes quirky heights. It
has acres of green roofs, including one atop an air traffic control
facility, to reduce storm water runoff and lower the urban heat island
effect of the airport's massive concrete expanse. The airport has even
turned over a wooded patch of land to 1 million bees living in 28
beehives that produce honey sold in the terminals and help replenish
declining bee populations.
"Welcome to Project Herd!" said Rosemarie Andolino, head of the
Chicago Department of Aviation, announcing the new effort to a group of
journalists who got a look at the project Tuesday.
Behind her, the goats and their furry friends were munching their way
through a steep embankment overgrown with tall grass and cattails on
the far northeastern corner of the 8,000-acre airport. Two bushy llamas
bounded up to the top, chased by one of the herders charged with looking
after the animals.
Under the mid-afternoon sun, the animals happily grazed or dozed,
seemingly oblivious to the roar of jumbo jets taking off and the
jostling of the gaggle of news photographers and television reporters,
who outnumbered the animals.
One of the sheep had just given birth to a lamb. The little guy, named O'Hare, was nuzzling its mother when reporters arrived.
"He's doing great. He was suckling on mom," said Pinky Janota, who
donated some of the animals from her rescue shelter in Beecher, Ill.,
south of Chicago, and helps manage them on site. "Planes flying
overhead; he didn't flinch. Mom didn't move. Everybody's content."
Other airports have similar programs, including at San Francisco
International, which uses a company called Goats R Us to clear brush
each spring in an effort to protect nearby homes from potential fires.
The other airports are in Atlanta and Seattle.
At O'Hare, the main goal is to rid the airport grounds of habitat for
birds and other wildlife that can present a serious hazard to departing
and landing aircraft. Many of those areas are beyond the reach of
traditional mowing equipment, which can't handle the steep embankments
or the rocky and loose soil.
Rabbits that hide in the grasses also draw birds of prey such as
red-tailed hawks. Deer and other animals wander into the area along the
region's many railroad tracks, which act as pathways for wildlife.
To scare away coyotes, there are the no-nonsense llamas and burros.
"The wild burros chase them and stomp them to death," Janota said.
So where does an airport find a herd of goats?
The Department of Aviation's want ad got a lively response from
interested herders and set off a bidding war. The contract, which
amounts to just under $20,000 for two years, went to Central Commissary
Holdings LLC, which was raising a small goat herd to produce cheese for
its Chicago restaurant, Butcher & the Burger.
It supplemented the herd with animals from Janota's organization, Settler's Pond Animal Shelter.
The project will lower the landscape maintenance costs for things
such as fuel and labor, and offer an alternative to using toxic
herbicides that can spill off into waterways.
But airline passengers needn't fear a high-speed collision with a
foraging critter. The herd will be kept far from active areas of the
airfield or behind fences.
But
they will chew on almost anything. Goats are not grazers, who eat
grass. They are browsers, who feed off leaves, shoots, fruits, shrubs
and other plants. They will taste and bite anything that might look like
plants and wooded vegetation, including cardboard boxes and paper—even
labels off tin cans.
Why is Satan often represented as a goat? In the Bible, he’s never described with horns, hoofed feet and beard. Nor in Milton’s Paradise Lost. Nor Dante’s Inferno.
Why? Blame it on the Knights Templar. Legend has it that the Templars
had initiation rituals, which weren’t so helpful when they were accused
of being homosexuals, heretics, and idolaters and burned at the stake by
King Philip the Fair of France in the 1300s. In order to show their
loyalty to fellow brothers, they reportedly had to kiss each others’
asses. In order to display courage, they had to spit on the crucifix and
pray that God doesn’t strike them down right there. And they were
supposedly trained to resist torture, in case the Saracens captured them
during the Crusades, and force them to deny Christ and worship a pagan
deity in the form of a goat. Under torture, some Templars apparently
“confessed” to kissing the head of a dead goat and worshipping the god
of the Muslims, calling out the name Muhammad—or Mahomet, which was
corrupted to Baphomet. Baphomet was revived in the 19th century by occult figures like Eliphas Levi and Aleister Crowley as a Satanic deity. Those horizontal pupils helped, too.
Goats have accents? Of course, leave it to the Brits to find out if goats from England sound sexier. Researchers from Queen Mary University of London
have found that goats’ accents change as they grow older and move into
different groups. The findings contradict claims that most mammals'
voices are entirely genetic. Previously only humans, elephants,
dolphins, and a few other mammals were thought to be able to pick up
accents.
They Stand On Cows
If you haven’t heard the 2007 Radiolab episode about a goat standing on a cow on the side of the road, do it now. The tale gets stranger and stranger as it evolves into somewhat of a detective story. Apparently, goats do stand on cows, and practically everything else, too, including on people. Goats, after all, originated from the Zagros Mountains in Anatolia, where they had to climb rocks and cliffs, and they can hold their balance in the most precarious places, including trees.
They Have Weird Rectangular Pupils
Goats’
eyes have horizontal slits, which give them deep peripheral vision and
allow them to monitor predators in a broad area. Horses, cows, and other
hoofed animals have similar pupils, but goats’ irises are usually pale,
so they show up more prominently, and are more able to scare people
Jedediah Island is a provincial marine park, located between Lasqueti and Texada Islands in the Sabine Channel of the Strait of Georgia, in British Columbia, Canada.
These goats were brought over by Spanish Explorers in the 18th Century and dropped off on the island as a potential food source for the return journey home.
An
ageing, strawberry-coloured horse and a herd of feral sheep and goats graze in
the fields that surround a farmhouse standing above the shoreline at Home Bay.
The horse was brought to Jedediah in the 1980s and stayed on after the owners
sold out. (Unfortunately, William the horse passed away peacefully last year). The weathered house
at Home Bay is boarded up now, as are all the outbuildings,
but there is still a definite feeling of a working homestead about the place. A
shed houses antique farm equipment beside an orchard of gnarled trees that
continue to blossom. The scene is an unusual one to find in a provincial park,
and reminiscent of Ruckle Provincial Park at the south end of Saltspring Island,
site of one of British Columbia's first family farms. Jedediah Island Provincial
Marine Park is located in the Strait of Georgia, between Vancouver Island and
the mainland of British Columbia.