**Thank you for your interest! We are fully booked for the 2024 grazing season.**
Are you looking for a sustainable way to clear your land? Do you want to do so without
the use of chemicals & heavy equipment? If the answer is yes - then we're here to help!
HaakHagen Goat Grazing, LLC services are available to properties within one hour of Poynette, WI. We specialize in the
removal of unwanted brush. You tell us what you want cleared, and our goats will do the hard work for you.
Why Goats?
Goats are a cost-effective, safe, and eco-friendly alternative to chemicals, heavy equipment, and burning!
-Chemicals can kill beneficial insects.
-The use of goats for grazing can be a great alternative to chemical usage
maneuver through thick, hard-to-reach brush that is difficult to access.
-It is roughly 50% cheaper to rent goats to clear brush than it is to rent heavy equipment.
- Chemical Alternative
-Chemicals can kill beneficial insects.
-The use of goats for grazing can be a great alternative to chemical usage
- Renting equipment can be costly...and can damage the delicate ecosystem.
maneuver through thick, hard-to-reach brush that is difficult to access.
-It is roughly 50% cheaper to rent goats to clear brush than it is to rent heavy equipment.
- Does your town require a burning permit? You won't need one for goats. They can clear your land with less risk than burning.
Goats are adaptable, natural-born landscapers!
consumption of these plants!).
- Goats get rid of invasive/unwanted plant species while maintaining wanted grass. Goats enjoy eating brush and plants such as buckthorn, honeysuckle, box elder, mulberry, multiflora rose, ragweed, lambs quarter, bur dock, spotted knapweed, garlic mustard....and so much more! If you have a specific plant in mind that you want to get rid of, we can tell you whether or not goat grazing would benefit you!
consumption of these plants!).
- Fertilizer? Yes! As goats graze, their pellets naturally fertilize the soil & promote growth of native grasses. As they graze they also break down seeds so the seeds are no longer viable, which stops new plants from sprouting.
- Fun Fact: A single goat spends 12-16 hours grazing per day, resulting in the consumption of roughly 8 lbs per day!