Opportunity

SAM #FA442726QZ060

Travis AFB Solicits Sheep Grazing Services for Vegetation and Wildfire Management

Buyer

442nd Air Expeditionary Logistics Squadron

Posted

July 14, 2026

Respond By

July 29, 2026

Identifier

FA442726QZ060

NAICS

561730, 115210

Travis Air Force Base is seeking sheep grazing services to manage vegetation, reduce wildfire risk, and control invasive plant species across designated pastures as part of its environmental management program. - Government Buyer: - United States Air Force, 60th Civil Engineering Squadron, Travis Air Force Base - OEMs and Vendors: - No specific OEMs or commercial vendors are named; the opportunity is open to qualified grazing service providers - Products/Services Requested: - Sheep Grazing Services for approximately 520 acres across 11 designated pastures - May include cattle co-grazing as needed - Requires full mobilization/demobilization of animals, equipment, and staff - 24/7 on-site shepherd management (shepherd to reside in RV/trailer on base) - Project oversight, adaptive grazing management, and compliance with environmental regulations - Coordination with base officials and annual monitoring - Unique or Notable Requirements: - Prescribed grazing to reduce hazardous fuel loads for wildfire mitigation and suppress invasive plant species - Services must support conservation of sensitive species and military mission goals - Contractor must provide adaptive management, annual monitoring, and comply with all land use and environmental regulations - Infrastructure such as fencing, water troughs, and cattle guards is present and must be maintained - Contract period is seasonal (approx. 120 days), with start date based on forage conditions and formal notice to proceed - Opportunity is open to a range of business sizes under NAICS code 561730 (Landscaping Services)

Description

The 60th Civil Engineering Squadron Group at Travis AFB, California is looking for vendors/contractors that can provide Sheep Grazing Services to manage vegetation through prescribed grazing, reduce hazardous fuel loads for wildfire mitigation, and suppress the growth of invasive plant species across the installation.

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