Found this one on a (usually) dead serious news site and thought I shouldn't deprive you of this little gem (I had to translate it on the fly, so it's propably not 100% perfect English)(if you find an error, you may keep it
)
Moooh vs Baaaah
A lovely green lawn is every house owner's pride. However, it takes a lot of effort and it's proper care is all but inexpensive. Why not hire someone who has a natural knowledge about everything lawn-ish?
American realty blog Movoto found a solution: such a lot of unemployed goats, sheep, chicken, guinea pigs and cows would be happy to keep your lawn short for free - a win/win situation.
They set up an online-calculator which tells you how many cows, sheep, chicken etc. you need for the perfect lawn-manicure:
http://www.movoto.com/blog/novelty-real-estate/reduce-animal-unemployment-hire-a-goat/
beware of your employees:
The advantages and disadvantages of the respective animals are listed as well: cows give milk but also a lot of gas. Guinea pigs are easy to transport but often get carried off and eaten by predators and they don't eat weeds. Goats (advantage: eat everything, disadvantage: eat everything), sheep (give milk and wool but have a boring personality) and chicken (lay eggs but dig holes) might not be suitable for every lawn-lover.
Where to hire them:
How do you get into contact with unemployed herbivores? Unfortunately, Movoto doesn't unveil this secret. Your local job center would propably be overextended by this question; retailers generally offer the gentle helpers only sliced and diced, and not as a - functionable - whole.
But perhaps you could ask your friendly next-door farmer which of his animals happen to have some spare time.
)Moooh vs Baaaah
A lovely green lawn is every house owner's pride. However, it takes a lot of effort and it's proper care is all but inexpensive. Why not hire someone who has a natural knowledge about everything lawn-ish?
American realty blog Movoto found a solution: such a lot of unemployed goats, sheep, chicken, guinea pigs and cows would be happy to keep your lawn short for free - a win/win situation.
They set up an online-calculator which tells you how many cows, sheep, chicken etc. you need for the perfect lawn-manicure:
http://www.movoto.com/blog/novelty-real-estate/reduce-animal-unemployment-hire-a-goat/
beware of your employees:
The advantages and disadvantages of the respective animals are listed as well: cows give milk but also a lot of gas. Guinea pigs are easy to transport but often get carried off and eaten by predators and they don't eat weeds. Goats (advantage: eat everything, disadvantage: eat everything), sheep (give milk and wool but have a boring personality) and chicken (lay eggs but dig holes) might not be suitable for every lawn-lover.
Where to hire them:
How do you get into contact with unemployed herbivores? Unfortunately, Movoto doesn't unveil this secret. Your local job center would propably be overextended by this question; retailers generally offer the gentle helpers only sliced and diced, and not as a - functionable - whole.
But perhaps you could ask your friendly next-door farmer which of his animals happen to have some spare time.

I think that's exactly why goats are popular lawnmowers in Seattle, they'll eat the thorny blackberry bushes!

Can't understand how goats and chomp on them and not get mouth infections from thorns drawing blood on gums and tongue.