Landfill-Landscaping Program Ends with 16 Goats and Sheep Likely Dead

Sixteen goats and sheep are likely dead about four years after they were bought to trim grass at a landfill.

The Virginian-Pilot
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Sixteen goats and sheep are likely dead about four years after Portsmouth, Virginia, bought them to trim the grass at the Craney Island landfill. The landscaping plan failed, its organizers are gone and administrators can’t account for most of the animals.

“We just haven’t been able to locate them,” said Erin Trimyer, the city’s director of Public Utilities. “I can’t tell you specifically if it was a coyote or what other wildlife is out there, but it is our assumption that the rest of the animals have passed away.”

At a work session last month, city manager Lydia Pettis Patton suggested to council members that they had been killed by coyotes and “other wildlife.”

Only two nanny goats live there now, roaming free as the hardy vestiges of an expensive landscaping flop. Landfill supervisor Chris Bower, who inherited the animals from his predecessor, now watches over them by making sure they have the basics: fresh water, a healthy diet and shelter.

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