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What We Can Learn From A Herd Of Hungry Goats

TK
via Youtube
TK

Now that's a gaggle of goats!

There are about 700 of them in the video. They belong to the California business Goats R Us, which keeps 8,000 goats on hand, renting them out to graze on brush, thistles and other undesired plants.

This particular herd was on the job in the hills of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. And their weed chomping is especially important this year: The vegetation they're eating could be fodder for fire in the drought-struck state.

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It doesn't take too much effort to get goats to head to the next patch of plants, says Terri Oyarzun, co-owner of Goats R Us.

"Have you heard the saying, 'The grass is always greener on the other side of the fence?' Goats were the inspiration for that philosophy," she says.

But the goatherd — and his faithful border collie companions — still has some work to do. There's always a goat or two who would like to take a detour. Just as a kindergarten teacher knows which kids need a little extra attention, so the goatherd will make sure the dogs can target the "delinquent goats" to keep them from straying, Oyarzun says.

And the goats do get the job done. "They are fast and direct," she says, "rather like we would want our computers to be."

There's a long tradition of stories about animals that teach lessons to us humans. So what can we learn from these goats?

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"[They have a] good attitude and work ethic," Oyarzun says. "They love their job and do it well."

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