GRAZING FOR FIRE ABATEMENT

Goats Spring 2021.jpg

2024 PLANNED VEGETATION CLEARING

During the last week of April and the first week of May 2024, Ventura Brush Goats will be in the canyon off Eucalyptus Hill Road, below Eucalyptus Hill Drive and above Alston Road. We first did this canyon in 2021 and after all the rains in the spring of 2023, it’s time to do this canyon again.

2023 Update

June 1, 2023. Sheep and goats are clearing vegetation ahead of wildfire season in Hale Park. This is the first time Santa Barbara Parks has used them in the park. We hope to begin work of some type of fire prevention in the largest canyon off Eucalyptus Hill Road sometime this summer.

2022 Fire Prevention efforts

The EHIA Board is getting ready for our spring fire prevention project. We plan on using at least 60% goats for our next canyon (behind Cima Linda, Owen Road, Rametto and Alston Road) as they are a better fit for the type of vegetation in this canyon. We have contracted with Ventura Brush Goats for this project.

We began this project on April 25th and it should take about ten days to complete.

The website for Ventura Brush Goats: https://venturabrushgoats.com

Goats and sheep arrive!

Ray Ford: Santa Barbara Neighborhoods Use Goats, Sheep to Power Wildfire Mitigation

The animals serve as a potent combination that reduces vegetation in areas where other practices won't work

By Ray Ford, Noozhawk Outdoors Writer | @riverayMay 1, 2022
What’s a goat good for? Quite a bit, it turns out.

Skinny creatures and a bit mangy looking, they can eat their way through a boatload of brush on slopes that would challenge the finest of hikers.

They’ll even eat poison oak!

Goats and sheep are being used more frequently as an alternative means of altering fire behavior by reducing the fuels available for burning in areas where other forms of fuel reduction aren’t practical.

Removing Fuel in an Urban Setting

The question — in an urban interface like that along the Santa Barbara Riviera or the Eucalyptus Hill area — is a big one: How do you remove enough of the lightweight brush and flashy grasses in the hillside communities on the edge of the wildland interface when the homes are set relatively close together?

One answer is through the use of goats and sheep to mow their way through the fuels that ignite easily: non-native grasses, weedy species and dead or dying brush.

Increasing Use of the Herbivores

For the past several years, both have been used extensively in local open space areas like Parma and Elings parks and in the neighborhoods surrounding the Mission Canyon community and along the Gaviota Coast.

This canyon in the Eucalyptus Hill area is typical of the type of brush with which homeowners in the area have to contend. (Ray Ford photo)

Elings Park has used Cuyama Lamb, a company based on the Gaviota coast that focuses on restorative ecology as a means of restoring native habitats, producing organically grown lamb and fine wool.

Co-owners Jenya Sarah Schneider and Jack Thrift Anderson quickly realized that sheep could serve a natural restorative process and at the same time be used to reduce fuel loads in areas that otherwise would be difficult to manage for wildfire.

"This year marks the fourth time we’ve had grazing at Elings,” Executive Director Dean Noble told me.

Located within a neighborhood environment where a fire could easily spread into homes bordering the park, Elings and other similar open space areas are using what the experts call “planned herbivory” as a means of reducing flammable fuels.

“We’ve also realized that we’re seeing our natives having a better chance at succeeding as well,” Noble said. “They’ve also turned into a bit of a local attraction with families coming out to enjoy them.”

Along with fuels reduction, John Warner, Arroyo Hondo Preserve manager, is experimenting with the use of the lambs as a means of reintroducing native plants into areas that have been dominated by non-natives such as black mustard.

Working in Restrictive Areas

This will be the Eucalyptus Hill Improvement Association’s second year using these rangy herbivores to reduce fuel loading in the canyons below many of the homes. This year, it is using a new company, Ventura Brush Goats, for the project.

Santa Barbara City Fire recommended we try using goats rather than the sheep,” association president Loy Beardsmore explained to me as we watched dozens of them munching away on most anything they could reach. “We were told the goats could reach higher up and get to leaves the sheep might not be able to reach.”

Given the number of newly sprouting eucalyptus in the canyon and other taller vegetation, anything that can keep a tree or shrub from catching on fire from ground flames is a good thing.

Ventura Brush Goats 

VBG is a family operated business that rose out of the lessons learned during the Thomas Fire. At the time, Michael Leicht and his wife owned a pair of dairy goats. What impressed them most was how quickly the goats could eat through the brush surrounding their paddock.

Thus the mantra: “Fire stops where goats graze.” 

In 2018, Leicht and his wife invested in their first goat herd, and by 2019, they had increased their numbers into the 70s.

“We soon learned that goats will happily munch through thick stands of thistles, poison oak and other species that are difficult and expensive to remove by hand,” Leicht said, adding that the beauty is how they target plants from the top down, generally eating the seed heads first, and in the process reduce the number of seeds in the soil the following year.

Composting on Legs

Both companies focus on the environmental benefits that the sheep and goats have to offer.

“Goats are like compost piles on legs,” Leicht said, meaning that they eat and poop, and eat and poop, and eat and poop. However, unlike with the manure created by cows or horses, their pellets scatter valuable nutrients that their hooves grind into the soil. 

“With their hooves, goats incorporate surface plant matter into thousands of little cups in the soil, which helps on a sloped hillside to retain water during a rain event, preventing top soil run-off,” Leicht added.

Eucalyptus Hill as a Model

It may very well be that the work the Eucalyptus Hill Association is doing can serve as a model for other communities situated on the wildland-urban interface along the South Coast.

The hillsides are steep, the canyons narrow, the vegetation thick, and are dominated by skyscraper-tall eucalyptus trees and other flammable vegetation. In the midst of all of that are the homes of various architectural styles, some by their nature fire resistant; others in need of home hardening to protect them from fire.

There is no prescribed burning on the frontcountry nor the ability to do much in the way of mechanical treatments. The use of chemicals or herbicides is out of the question. Even hauling out the branches, brush or other cuttings is difficult.

Like many other parts of the frontcountry, the Eucalyptus Hill community has not burned in decades.

The conditions here might be called “goat-like” — terrain perfectly suited for the use of the herbivores to keep things in check.

Cost as a Limiting Factor

The biggest limiting factor to using either goats or sheep is cost. The question when funds are limited is how to best spend what little money one has.

Last year, when the Eucalyptus Hill Association was first envisioning use of the herbivores, it was not encouraged to do so. There are no budgets for goats, and using them would require painfully slow environmental reviews, City Fire officials told them. Some in fire encouraged the association to focus more on home hardening and defensible space than the use of the goats.

This year again, the association has been forced to raise the funds itself for the work done by VBG.

“It’s come mainly from donations within the community," Loy Beardsmore said.

The association is looking to grant possibilities that may help defray costs in the future. One possibility that is now in play that wasn’t last year is the Firewise USA program. It may not only will help defray soaring insurance costs but could provide funding for future use of the goats or lambs.

Future of Funding

Thanks to funding from a state program known as the California Climate Investments, millions of dollars are now becoming available for use in mitigating for climate change. Base on cap-and-trade funds, this provides funding for a range of climate-based programs, including fire mitigation and prevention.

The Santa Barbara County Firesafe Council has put together a grant that would fund both neighborhood chipping and herbivory programs. If successful, there will be funding for the use of lambs and goats throughout the South Coast from Hollister Ranch to the Carpinteria area.

Look for more information regarding these and other programs on the Firesafe Council website


It’s all ABout the Sheep and Goats!

Here is a great video from Edible Santa Barbara highlighting Cuyama Lamb, LLC. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jVJjYLaIztE

EHIA has been very concerned about the canyons within the Eucalyptus Hill neighborhood as they relate to fire danger. We have worked with Santa Barbara City Fire, Santa Barbara County Fire, and Montecito Fire to have these canyons designated as areas of concern with the Community Wildfire Protection Plan (CWPP). Due to the lack of rain this season, we are again considered to be in HIGH fire danger.

EHIA has been researching hiring goat and sheep companies to eradicate the vegetation because of their proven track record in grazing to aid in fire fuel reduction. The sheep and/or goats usually graze a two to three acre electric fenced section while being checked on by personnel to be sure they don’t overgraze, and are protected from predators by protective dogs. Then the fences and animals are moved to the next section.

The animals are quieter, cheaper, and environmentally friendlier than hand crews. This type of grazing has historically lessened the intensity of wildfires by reducing flammable ladder fuels. This type of mitigation is used by our local fire departments, as well as other departments throughout our area. The City and County of Santa Barbara and the Montecito Fire Protection District have used sheep and goats to graze various areas, including the Tea Gardens, Elings Park, Scofield Park, and the San Marcos Foothills Preserve.

To begin our fire mitigation project, we are looking at the smallest canyon to secure cooperation from homeowners owning and bordering the canyon along Eucalyptus Hill Road from the Eucalyptus Hill Drive area, down along Alston Road. If we are successful in this effort, then we will look to do the same thing in the other two canyons in the Eucalyptus Hill neighborhood.

We have contracted with Cuyama Lamb, LLC to bring in sheep and goats the week of May 17, 2021, to start this process.  

We are hopeful that all residents owning and bordering these areas will contribute to this effort. We also are encouraging anyone that lives in our Eucalyptus Hill neighborhood to consider contributing as well, as we are hopeful this will mitigate some of the danger that is present for all of us.

If you have any other questions regarding this project, please feel free to contact an EHIA board member.

If you’d like to make a donation toward our efforts, please click the button below. Or, you can send a check to EHIA, PO Box 40182, Santa Barbara, CA 93140. If you have any questions, you may contact us at info@eucalyptushillia.com.

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