|  |   Getting Tom  Butt’s Goat
 
  
  
  
  
  
 
 Always keep the  newspaper out of reach when feeding goats (Photo: Sarah Phelan).By Sarah PhelanPosted 3 hours ago
 
 Richmond City  Councilmember Tom Butt makes no bones about the fact that he keeps a menagerie  on the 5 acres that surround his property in Point Richmond. For a decade, Butt  has shared anecdotes, sometimes humorous, sometimes sad, about his various  goats, sheep, dogs and bees on “Tom Butt’s e-forum,” an electronic forum where  he also posts articles about more pressing matters of concern to his  constituents, such as preserving historic railroad crossings and investigating  the Chevron fire.
 
 Perusing these  archives, readers learn that for years, Butt, now 68, has brought several members  of his small goat herd to Point Richmond’s annual Thanksgiving Turkey Shoot,  which involves downing shots of Wild Turkey, rather than shooting actual wild  turkeys. That he continues to collect honey from his bees. And that  firefighters once had to rappel down a cliff that backs onto Butt’s property  and rescue one of Butt’s sheep and a neighbor’s dog, after the dog chased the  sheep over the cliff.
 
 But so far there  has been no mention on Butt’s e-forum of a pygmy goat named Lil G, who is the  most recent addition to his animal collection.
 
 Maybe that’s  because Butt is trying not to get too attached to Lil G, who was raised as a  pet by a family friend, and has the stature of a small dog, but quickly wreaks  a very goat-like havoc on her immediate environments thanks to a typically  goat-like lack of toilet training.
 
 This is  compounded by Lil G’s refusal to hang out with other goats and munch on brush.  Instead, Lil G has taken a fancy to nibbling with rubbery lips on the tomatoes  that are ripening on Butt’s patio, and she treats Butt’s two Labrador rescue  dogs, Tess and Chispa, like family, even though they are three times her size.
 
 Indeed, when I  first met Lil G, she was running along, kicking up her heels behind Tess and  Chispa. The dogs were bounding towards us, barking, tails wagging furiously at  Butt as he opened the gate that leads to his property atop Nicholl’s Knob, a  brush-covered hill with dramatic views of San Francisco from its ocean-facing slope  and the Chevron refinery on the other.
 “In the ‘80s, we  bought land on Nicholl’s Knob, which had a history of burning down,” Butt said,  as he led me along a leaf-strewn path that winds towards the goat pasture.  “Each year, people would go up there and shoot off bottle rockets, even though  there’s not supposed to be fireworks at all, and typically the brush fires  would be around July 4.
 
 “So, when we  bought the property and started building a house, we were concerned about  fires,” Butt continued, as he unlatched the gate into the pasture. “A woman who  had a couple of goats, had to get rid of them because neighbors were  complaining. So we took them. They both turned out to be pregnant, so soon  there were four.”
 
 Butt extended a  handful of leaves to Hans, a mellow-mannered white Angora wether, which means  he is castrated and therefore is not aggressive and does not stink unlike  “intact” goats. Hans was soon joined in his leaf-chomping activities by Fish  and Trip, who, together with Hans, function as sustainable lawnmowers on Butt’s  otherwise brush-covered property.
 “We also got  some sheep and they multiplied,” Butt said, as three sheep named Peter Pan,  Tinker Bell and Pixie Dust wandered over to find out what was for lunch.
 
 “When we first  lived here, there was lots of poison oak and French broom,” Butt said, as he  pointed out an electric fence that separates his upper field from the lower  field, where his sheep and goats are currently being encouraged to graze.  “Coyote brush and toyan do better if you cut them down. But one thing goats  don’t do is discriminate. They eat everything.”
 I asked if Butt  ever has problems with his goats eating his neighbors’ everything.
 
 Butt shrugged.  “What happens sometimes is these fences, especially the ones that are exposed,  rust out and goats rub against them and go through the hole and into the  brush,” he said. “But goats aren’t really the problem. They are made for  cliffs. It’s sheep that are dumb.”
 
 Butt recalled  how, one Tuesday, just as he was getting ready to go to a City Council meeting,  someone was walking a dog, and the dog got through a hole in Butt’s fence and  chased a sheep who crashed through a rusty place in the fence and headed  towards a big cliff called Dead Mans Bluff.
 
 “The dog’s name  was Sparkle and the sheep was Peter Pan, so Sparkle chased Peter Pan over the  cliff and ended up on the ledge,” Butt said. “Someone called me, late  afternoon, so I came home. The firemen were called out with all their equipment  and it became a huge media event.”
 
 Butt remembered  that the incident happened in February 2011, because it was just days after  protests began in Syria and Egypt’s Tahrir Square and shortly before Egyptian  President Hosni Mubarak resigned.
 
 “My wife was  waiting down at the bottom of the cliff, when one of the firefighters gives her  the cellphone and says, ‘It’s someone from CNN’s newsroom in Atlanta, saying,  ‘We all want to know what’s going on.’ And my wife is, ‘Are you kidding me?  There’s the Egyptian uprising, the Arab Spring, and all you want to know is  what’s happening with a sheep and a dog in Richmond?’”
 
 Butt shepherds  me back to the house, and let’s me have one more look, at Lil G, who the family  rescued a couple of weeks ago.
 
 “My son is  taking her to a petting zoo next Saturday,” he said, and then, noticing how  enamored I seemed with Lil G, “Want a goat?”
 
 I declined, but  the next day, after I discovered that all my photographs of Lil G were blurry,  I returned to Butt’s property, this time alone, to shoot her some more.
 
 “Did you get the  shots you wanted?” Butt said, when he finally returned home from work.
 
 “Maybe,” I said,  noting how she tends to pirouette and jump unexpectedly.
 
 Butt smiled.  “Today, I was eating a BLT sandwich for lunch and she jumped up and grabbed  it,” he said. “Just like a dog.”
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