| "... might I suggest interring trimmed brush deep enough to not burn but shallow enough ..." Your comment is ill-received so far in this discussion but I actually think this is a reasonable line of thought. It is incredibly energy intensive and time-consuming to trim tens of acres of brush and then, on top of that, it is even more energy intensive to dig holes and bury it. And so that is why your idea is typically implemented with goats. I don't think it is nearly as effective as a wildfire but it approaches the outcome you're describing and is much, much better than nothing. I will also point out that the carbon calculus that we are all obliged to consider is very complicated and very often produces results counter to what we thought was "the right thing to do". Specifically: raising 200 goats, trucking them around from place to place, the human logistics (and their vehicles and food and supplies) and the cradle-to-grave carbon expenses of every piece of this activity ... it's not obvious that that is smaller than the released carbon of 10 acres of spindly brush. |
I think the advantage is that goats are easier to control than fire, especially in very dry conditions, which is why they are used in high fire risk urban areas.