Waterloo Region Record

Sheep move through Montreal streets for lawn-mowing duties

- Morgan Lowrie

MONTREAL — With only a few bleats of protest, a flock of woolly, four-legged lawn mowers took a rare stroll through the streets of Montreal on Wednesday to take up their duties in a new city park.

The six ewes and four lambs were carefully herded along the sidewalk from one park to another with the help of shepherds and volunteers holding up orange barricades.

The 10 animals are providing environmen­tally friendly lawn maintenanc­e and educationa­l opportunit­ies in three parks in the Rosemont-La Petite-Patrie borough this summer.

Marie-Eve Julien-Denis, one of the project’s organizers, says grazing animals provide a natural way to trim the grass and eradicate invasive plant species.

Unlike mechanical lawn mowers, “herbivores have the ability to eat invasive species like buckthorn and phragmites, and to uproot them so they don’t grow back,” she said.

Wednesday’s event was inspired by a European transhuman­ce, when livestock are moved from summer to winter pastures — an event often followed by a village celebratio­n.

Led by a shepherd with a bucket of grain, Montreal’s sheep largely stayed within plastic mesh fencing held by volunteers during the kilometrel­ong walk down the sidewalk.

While the first-ever Montreal transhuman­ce didn’t come close to the scale of the events in Europe, which can involve thousands of animals, Julien-Denis has high hopes for the little flock.

She hopes the project, titled Biquette a Montreal, could soon bring in more sheep to more parks.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Julian Bejerman, 2, gets a close look at some sheep Wednesday in Montreal. The sheep act as eco-friendly lawn mowers.
RYAN REMIORZ, THE CANADIAN PRESS Julian Bejerman, 2, gets a close look at some sheep Wednesday in Montreal. The sheep act as eco-friendly lawn mowers.

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