Greetings neighbors at Meadowview!
We are happy to offer our brush management and conservation practice around the acres of open space in the meadow and brush management zones for the community. We are the Good Shepherds, an unincorporated regenerative land management group that serve for ecological fire abatement and land regeneration, stewards of the greater good. We will be shepherding over 300 goats and sheep who eat the flashy fire fuels and trim back growth. The herd is protected by livestock guardian dogs, shepherded by border collies, and guided by a team of dedicated shepherds servicing the land. Prescribed Herbivory, what we do, is one of five wildfire risk reduction vegetation management practices recognized by the California Board of Forestry and Fire Protection, as critical to addressing the wildfire crisis in the Wild Urban Interface, where you live. When done right, this practice can improve the soil, reduce erosion events and enhance the native ecology while minimizing flashy fuels.
As well as the defensible space areas we will be servicing, we be doing a conservation practice of grazing in the meadow. This can help enhance native and fire resistant plants, while helping to eat down and trample down some of the over growth and dead material. We will be on site setting up on Thursday April 2nd, animals will arrive around in their first wave on Saturday April 4th if all goes as planned. We will be in the Meadowview Community at least 30days and will likely be in until the second week of May.
There are many elements that go into this, including a team of experienced individuals dedicated to living on-site and available 24/7 to tend the animals and their various needs. We love community and aim to maintain good relations. To be viable and successful in covering the acreage and protecting property we ask for your cooperation.
For homeowners, renters and guests:
Additional Notes:
About Prescribed Grazing:
In the case of an emergency please call us at 858-522-0402.
All other inquiries can be made by e-mail: [email protected]
For more information visit www.goodshepherds.earth and for a more candid lens into our work and lifestyle, feel free to follow us on Instagram: @wearegoodshepherds. Feel free to tag your social media if you get some fun shots.
We are honored to be here serving the land and your community in these ways. We look forward to a smooth and successful spring grazing!
Sincerely,
Your Good Shepherds
We are happy to offer our brush management and conservation practice around the acres of open space in the meadow and brush management zones for the community. We are the Good Shepherds, an unincorporated regenerative land management group that serve for ecological fire abatement and land regeneration, stewards of the greater good. We will be shepherding over 300 goats and sheep who eat the flashy fire fuels and trim back growth. The herd is protected by livestock guardian dogs, shepherded by border collies, and guided by a team of dedicated shepherds servicing the land. Prescribed Herbivory, what we do, is one of five wildfire risk reduction vegetation management practices recognized by the California Board of Forestry and Fire Protection, as critical to addressing the wildfire crisis in the Wild Urban Interface, where you live. When done right, this practice can improve the soil, reduce erosion events and enhance the native ecology while minimizing flashy fuels.
As well as the defensible space areas we will be servicing, we be doing a conservation practice of grazing in the meadow. This can help enhance native and fire resistant plants, while helping to eat down and trample down some of the over growth and dead material. We will be on site setting up on Thursday April 2nd, animals will arrive around in their first wave on Saturday April 4th if all goes as planned. We will be in the Meadowview Community at least 30days and will likely be in until the second week of May.
There are many elements that go into this, including a team of experienced individuals dedicated to living on-site and available 24/7 to tend the animals and their various needs. We love community and aim to maintain good relations. To be viable and successful in covering the acreage and protecting property we ask for your cooperation.
For homeowners, renters and guests:
- If the herd is eating unwanted plants, have gotten into your yard or if there is an emergency concern, please call us immediately at 858-522-0402. While you wait for our arrival feel free to shew and direct the herd away from unwanted areas by clapping loudly and making some noise.
- Please call us if you see animals outside of the electric netting or if the fence is down.
- Please do not touch or tamper with the electric netting. The amperage is low, so it’s not dangerous, but the voltage produces a memorable experience. This is to keep our herd in the right places and help deter would-be predators.
- Please stay a distance back if you have a pacemaker, electronic implants, are riding an e-bike or with any electronics to keep you and property safe.
- There are places where the fence must cross through trails on the property. Please do not attempt to go over the fence by foot or bike. If you cannot pass, please turn around and take another route.
- Please do not feed any of the animals. Changes to the ruminants’ diets can affect their ability to digest the food and can consequently make them ill. It can also cause them to break through the fence and cause an issue.
- Please avoid bringing your K-9 pets close to the paddocks. We have working dogs that are meant to keep predators away. Domestic dogs are seen as predators, even small ones.
- Our three livestock guardian dogs are Bear (a big, white Great Pyrenees) and Darling (a white and tan, mixed Anatolian shepherd) and our youngest Luna (Great Pyreness, Anatolian mix). If you discover one of the dogs outside of their area they are generally nice to humans and can be leashed or contained until we are able to retrieve them.
- Please refrain from feeding the dogs treats, as this encourages them to adventure out. They are well feed and have plenty of access to water in their paddocks.
Additional Notes:
- Please respect the efforts and the space of the shepherds. Due to the 24/7 needs that arise from tending to the herd we live in trailers nearby on approved sites for the duration of the project.
- Please consider the value of having grazing as a critical fire abatement service, we sincerely apologize for any negative impacts you may experience from our presence, and aim to bring more joy and leave the land and community better off.
- We are here in hopes that fire crews won’t have to be in the future, and that if they do, they will have a lower flame height to be of less risk to fire fighting crews and a better chance at saving property and lives. We do our best to mitigate any minor issues while striving to reduce loss of property and life from wildfire.
- We are contracted to graze specific areas that are managed by your community association, please note that we cannot respond to other requests.
About Prescribed Grazing:
- Around California this abatement technique is being cited as an effort to have homeowner insurance premiums lowered.
- CalFire, the Board of Forestry, and many other relevant organizations have seen and support the research and implementation of prescribed grazing. California’s government and local leaders have begun promoting it as a way to effectively and ecologically manage high severity fire zones.
- You may notice our herd will leave matter and avoid certain plants that aren’t palatable certain times of the year. Our natural environment needs the vegetation to have a healthy ecosystem, that in turn can hold more water in the soil, preventing erosion and fostering heather fire resistant plants, while providing healthy habitat for animals. What does happen is that most of the vegetation is thinned out and trampled to a point that it won’t have enough contiguous plant matter to keep a hot fire going. The goats browse, sometimes you may see them climbing, and the sheep mow. Without herd ruminants, or mechanical removal, fire will eventually come to cycle the plant matter back into the soil. In place of having intense wild fires we can manage the brush and grasses with careful management of our flerd (flock and herd).
- Nature’s recyclers: sheep and goats have four stomach chambers in which they can take plant matter and turn it into pelletized compost that can go directly back to feeding the soil. If you cut and remove plants it disrupts the natural cycle, and will start to produce drier, brittle and harsh plants as it turns from lush arid to fire tinder leading to desertification. As part of our big picture ecological regeneration goals, we aim to aid a succession from desert to forest. Sheep and goats close the loop. Their action removes hazards, recycles them and puts a natural pressure on the land, while adding to habitat health.
In the case of an emergency please call us at 858-522-0402.
All other inquiries can be made by e-mail: [email protected]
For more information visit www.goodshepherds.earth and for a more candid lens into our work and lifestyle, feel free to follow us on Instagram: @wearegoodshepherds. Feel free to tag your social media if you get some fun shots.
We are honored to be here serving the land and your community in these ways. We look forward to a smooth and successful spring grazing!
Sincerely,
Your Good Shepherds