Fencing

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JohnnyP
Posts: 56
Joined: Tue Jan 24, 2012 10:10 pm
Location: Isle of Skye

Fencing

Post by JohnnyP »

I've enjoyed the "subject for another thread" discussion, but it got me thinking about fencing, a favourite topic of mine. I've always thought that any cow can get through or over any fence, if properly motivated - hunger, sex drive, fear, etc. One consequence of that thinking is that I don't use barbed wire because if the cow is going through the fence, it's going through and I don't want additional injuries caused by the barbed wire. On reasonably flat to undulating land I use Forestry Commission spec. which is two spring steel wires top and bottom to support stock netting which is only lashed to the wires (not stapled anywhere) and a single spring steel wire above (the stock netting). On steeply undulating ground I use four spring steel wires only, with tie downs where necessary to prevent posts lifting. Also as a temporary measure, when strip grazing or keeping the cows away from some hazard I occasionally use a single or double strand of electric fencing. I've had a roll of barbed wire for years, and only mutter about putting it out to deter tourists, not cows! (but I've never done it).

And finally, I recommend to anyone interested in fencing, the BTCV Fencing book.
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Rob R
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Joined: Sat Mar 05, 2005 9:30 pm
Location: Yorkshire Ings
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Re: Fencing

Post by Rob R »

We have standard stock netting 2" off the ground, topped with two strands of barbed wire at 4 & 8" above that, giving 41 inches in total, seems to keep most things in.
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Rob R
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Joined: Sat Mar 05, 2005 9:30 pm
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Re: Fencing

Post by Rob R »

We're grazing some land at the moment that has sheep netting, a strand of plain wire and a strand of barbed on top. Today, in a 'grass is always greener' moment, one or more of the Dexter cows have forced their heads between the plain wire & netting to reach the other side.

At the same time, the bottom strand of wire snapped on the electric and they didn't go under! Also, I forgot to put the bottom strand of the electric gate across yesterday and neither have they strayed under that! (apart from some of the calves).
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SteveM
Posts: 450
Joined: Sun Oct 09, 2005 4:48 am
Location: East Yorkshire

Re: Fencing

Post by SteveM »

The fields we sub-let and summer graze have electric fence only. young stock get trained at home where we have electic fence inside an old barbed wire fence, and around a central pond.
Humberdale Dexters (31319)
Holderness
East Yorkshire
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