Daily Southtown (Sunday)

‘Invasives came in, and itwent horribly bad’

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Scattered throughout the fiery autumn foliage at Indiana DunesNatio­nal Park are green patches of Asiatic bitterswee­t, its yellow-orange fruit soon to split open with red berries, lending a holiday look to thewoods.

But this invasive plant is better suited to “Little Shop ofHorrors” than any Christmas story.

Its snaking vines can climb at a rapid pace, enveloping and choking trees, and killing off plants below — a grim threat in one of the country’s most biodiverse national parks where native species thrive.

Chemical sprays and controlled burns have been deployed against invasive plants at the park for years. Now America’s newest national park is turning to the unique talents of Thelma and Louise, goat half-sisters who were tasked this past summer with eating as much as they could in an overrun section where tangles of the woody bitterswee­t are as big as a fist.

Thelma and Louise worked out so well they could be back at the dunes next year, maybe with some reinforcem­ents.

“They were good company,” said Geof Benson, executive director of the Dunes Learning Center, which cared for the animals over the summer. “I think whatweneed­ismore goats.”

Thelma and Louise are part of a growing industry as people turn away from chemical options, according toMidweste­rners in the goat rental business. Goats have helped out major electric companies by grazing under power lines, cleared beachfront camps along Lake Michigan and cleaned up backyard gardens. A few years ago, Amazon began renting out goats.

“More people are discoverin­g that it’s just a lot easier to let animals do the work,” saidGreenG­oatsownerK­im Hunter, who jokes she’s a “goat goddess” and has lent her Wisconsin herd to organizati­ons like the Naperville Park District. “Sometimes, just tobe funny, when I pass someone on their mower I yell, ‘Get a goat!’ Life is too short to spend it doing thework that a goat will do.”

Thelma is a Nubian goat and the more mild-mannered of the pair. She earned the nickname Jar Jar Binks because of her floppy ears and mocha color. Louise is white and smaller, partSaanen. Theywere raised by hobby farmerKyle­Wilson, a steel company employee who’s happy to volunteer his animals for educationa­l projects at the park.

The goats were chosen for their friendline­ss, he said. Thelma and Louise are about a year old, like to be petted and have a sweet spot for Duke, a horse on the Chellberg Farm near the spot where they spent their three summer months.

Ona sunny October afternoon, Thelma left the chickens, horses and turkeys at the farm and returned to the restoratio­n site for a tour of her work. Louise, who stayedbehi­nd, jumpedupon her hind legs to peer out over the gate. Ableat. Another bleat. But Thelmawalk­ed away.

Jim Whitenack, volunteer programman­ager of the park, talked about the project as he walked the path to the goats’ summer home. Using the goatswas a test to see if they could be contained by an electric fence, if they would eat problemati­c plants and — the main point — if they could get visitors to talk about stopping invasives.

One day while exploring, the goats ended up in an old, empty swimming pool built by U.S. Steel. Thelma and Louise were hidden from view and caused a momentary panic they had escaped. And there were some complaints from staff who worked near the enclosure who said they heard a lot of bleating through the open windows.

But the project was a success: The goats stayed inside the fence, ate a lot and offered a cute visual to kids learning about invasive species.

“A big part of it is just talking about the resources in the park, the biodiversi­ty, all this we have to protect,” Whitenack said. “And teaching (kids) to be good land stewards.”

A school group was set to visit the next day, and Whitenack said he would probably bring out a goat. “Whether it’s a salamander or a toad or a goat or a chicken, yes, people like animals,” said Benson, of the Dunes Learning Center. “They love the goats.”

The work site is past the Bailly Homestead, on land where U.S. Steel employees once sent their kids to camp.

Camp Good Fellow operated from the early 1940s to the late ’70s and offered kids a chance to learn about the environmen­t and participat­e in outdoor recreation, Whitenack said. In 1959, the Tribune reported 1,000 children used the camp that summer for “everything from dissecting snakes to shooting on a firing range.”

The park then purchased the land but didn’t do much with it until the 1990s, eventually establishi­ng the Dunes Learning Center. “It used to be all manicured grass,” Whitenack said.

“Then a lot of invasives camein, and itwent horribly bad.”

Whitenack shared some photos from the ‘50s showing an aerial view of the campwithpr­istinelymo­wed lawns around courts and bunkhouses. Then he showed another shot from a few years ago with a slew of dead ash trees.

“It’s a blanket of bitterswee­t out there right now,” Whitenacks­aid. “Itprobably still looks a little rough for you guys, but if you just saw it two years ago, it was so bad. So we’re so excited we got it to this point.”

The fenced-in area where the goats worked covers about a quarter-acre that’s overrun with bitterswee­t as well as other invasives: multiflora rose, bush honeysuckl­e and garlic mustard. Outside of the enclosure is a sign: “Goats atWork.”

“If you can imagine having five, 10goats inhere, they would clear this pretty quick,” Whitenack said, showing off stems inside the fence, evidence of the goats’ work.

As Thelma returned to hersummerh­ome, she stuck her head through an opening and chomped some leaves.

“Want to go back to work?” Whitenack asked.

The park has long focused on curbing invasive species, using everything from saws and tractors to chemicals and fire. Because of limited resources, park managers concentrat­e on rare habitats and frequently visited areas.

“It’s a tough battle, but we’re making pretty good headway on it,” said Dan Plath, chief of resourcema­nagement for the park. Still, he added, “We’re probably only treating 20% of the park ifwe’re lucky.”

Some of the invasives have been in the park for decades, but others have surged in recent years, he said. Typically, invasives are nonnative plants that run rampant and disrupt the balance of an ecosystem.

As invasives take over, often arriving from boots, equipment or birds, one of the first casualties are rare plants. Loss of habitats for a host of species follows. Invasives can also harm humans and animals, worsen water quality and be costly.

“They don’t play well with others,” Plath said.

The park is currently fighting against invasives like phragmites, hybrid cattail, buckthorn, Japanese knotweed and even wetland species like purple loosestrif­e.

Asiatic bitterswee­t, found throughout the park, is a particular­ly bad one, Plath said. Some people add it to decoration­s that end up outside, and then birds and other animals eat the bright seeds, depositing them far and wide. Once bitterswee­t is establishe­d, it moves fast, growing in a year or two from a seed to sprouting plant, and then soon creating its own seeds, leading to exponentia­l growth.

“They’re kind of pretty, but once you realize what it does, then it’s not so good,” Plath said.

But goats don’t mind eating it. When invasives pass through goats’ digestive systems, the cycle ends.

Plath said the goats are mostly a good reminder to get people to do their part, raising awareness and encouragin­g them to “start planting natives instead of things that are going to invade the dunes.”

Midwestern­ers say the goat rental industry is growing as environmen­tal concerns rise.

Kim Hunter of Green Goats estimates a single goat can clear about 300 square feet of an invasive like buckthorn in a day without chemicals or clippings. It can be expensive to maintain the herds and natural restoratio­n takes time, but goats can be a cheaper solution for larger acreage. And each time goats return, it’s a more effective clearing process.

“Goats don’t fall down hills, goats don’t have workman’s comp,” said Hunter, who has lent her goats to a contractor that had to mitigate invasives while building an electric generating station. “Goats don’t get poison ivy. They eat poison ivy.”

Dustin Ellinger, an affiliate of Goatsonthe­Gowhois based out of south central Illinois, said goats also “draw a heck of a crowd.”

“When I unload these, there’s usually 20 people watching. Thepeople love it, the kids love it. It’s a lotmore enjoyable towatch a goat eat brush than watching a bulldozer plow it over with a blade.”

Gina Fickle, co-owner of the Michigan- based Munchers on Hooves and a goat renter of about four years, said she’s watched goats bring neighborho­ods together. “We’ve had people that have contacted us saying, ‘We’re glad the goats were here. We’ve got new friends.’ ”

Fickle said she once put 10 goats together for a job. But they weren’t working, and she didn’t knowwhy.

“Well, we had one goat named Ornery,” Fickle said. Ornery was a “queen goat” who would shove the other goats in a corner when she was finished eating. “So they’re like people — if you get the wrong personalit­ies together, they don’t work well.”

For now, Thelma and Louise remain a team.

Benson, of the Dunes Learning Center, said it would be fun to have more goats, especially with all the invasive species. And, he joked, “I wouldn’t even mind trying cows.”

mgreene @chicagotri­bune.com

 ?? JOSE M. OSORIO/CHICAGO TRIBUNE PHOTOS ?? Volunteer Jim Whitenack takes Thelma, right, out for a walk as her sister Louise looks on at Chellberg Farm in Indiana Dunes National Park in Porter, Indiana, on Oct. 15.
JOSE M. OSORIO/CHICAGO TRIBUNE PHOTOS Volunteer Jim Whitenack takes Thelma, right, out for a walk as her sister Louise looks on at Chellberg Farm in Indiana Dunes National Park in Porter, Indiana, on Oct. 15.
 ??  ?? A test site where goats ate nonnative plants near the former Good Fellow youth camp area at Indiana Dunes National Park in Porter, Indiana.
A test site where goats ate nonnative plants near the former Good Fellow youth camp area at Indiana Dunes National Park in Porter, Indiana.
 ??  ?? Thelma, right, and Louise, two of the goats that ate nonnative plants at Indiana Dunes National Park in Porter, Indiana.
Thelma, right, and Louise, two of the goats that ate nonnative plants at Indiana Dunes National Park in Porter, Indiana.

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