Nestled between railroad tracks and a cement recycling plant in San Francisco’s Bayview neighborhood lives a little herd of urban goats with a big appetite for one of the only things that flourished in the the California drought: dry, fire-hazard brush.

Since 2008, City Grazing has been herding mixed-breed goats in the unlikely meadow and sending them on freelance assignments to eat up overgrowth everywhere from San Franciscans’ backyards to federal land in the Presidio. The landscaping goats are a green alternative to heavy machinery and pesticides and can easily graze steep hillsides, all while leaving behind a biodegradable fertilizer.

Starting last year, California’s driest year on record and host to the devastating Rim Fire, the company was inundated with calls asking about goat landscaping as a way to protect the land, City Grazing’s Genevieve Church told The Huffington Post.

“There’s been a definite increase in thoughts of, ‘How do we reduce fire hazard?’” she said. “When the number of wildfires increased in California in 2013, we began to get a lot more phone calls asking if goats were a viable option here … They’re the tried and true traditional method. Grazing animals have always been a wonderful way to keep grasslands and brushy areas reduced in that dry material.”

With triple the call volume, City Grazing decided to grow its goat family, and since January, around 50 baby goats, or kids, have been born into the herd and doubled its size. On Sunday, the company held an open house at the meadow where the public could watch a ceremonial “running of the goats” out to pasture.

“Creating new animals gives us the opportunity to train them from a very young age,” Church told HuffPost. “It’s great to have animals that are happy on leashes and naturally happy with people, so I’ve been inviting the public to come in and hold some baby goats to get these animals really used to people, which will hopefully allow us to do some more speciality grazing.”

City Grazing -- the city’s only goat operation -- is relatively small compared to similar landscaping herds in nearby rural areas where the goat count is in the thousands, Church said, but keeping the business small allows her and the team to know and name each goat, tap into their distinct personalities and send the right grazer to the right job.

“If we’re going some place that’s ten acres, we’ll take animals that have a big appetite and aren’t as social,” she explained. “If we’re going to a house with kids, we’ll bring animals that like attention. I’ll have an idea for who’s going to be the next goat I grab when someone contacts us wanting a goat to do a commercial or other calls for great specialty jobs.”

While other landscaping goat herds have been employed in Portland, Seattle and Los Angeles, the goats in San Francisco may also be responsible for some social good in their neighborhood.

“It’s changed the land from a kind of scrubby brushy area into more of a meadow, reducing taller vegetation that was facilitating the criminal activity in the area,” Church told HuffPost. “We’ve seen reduced homeless encampments and people dumping trash. That wasn’t our intent, but it was a nice byproduct.”

As far as the goats' well-being, Church says their exceptionally diverse diet has done their bodies good.