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Fencing
Author: Jo 
Date:   10-26-06 15:58

Hi,

I have a question about fencing. We live on a shrubby lot that is also kind of hilly. We have goats and poultry right now. However, we also have a lot of wildlife. Everything from deer to possums, raccoons and foxes. We definately have problems with the foxes getting our poultry.

We use the goats for brush control and for milking. I have to go an get the goats from thearea we have penned with livestock panels and bring them to the garage for milking.

I think I want some kind of perimeter fence to fence out the wildlife and see if we can keep the foxes out too. I'd love to be able to let the chickens and ducks go where they want to keep the bugs down. I also need different grazing/browsing cells for the goats that we can rotate them to.

So how do we go about trying to fence our land?



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Re: Fencing
Author: Scott 
Date:   10-27-06 18:10

Jo
Poultry fencing (both containment and predator exclusion is best done with poultry netting (portable). Sheep and goat fence (including predator) is usually best done with our HT woven w/offsets http://www.premier1supplies.com/fencing.php?mode=detail&fence_id=16 . Permanent Perimeter fences are very difficult to do (especially on rougher ground) for poultry predators.

Thanks
Scott

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Re: Fencing
Author: Todd Miles 
Date:   10-31-06 15:18

I don't work at Premier. This is sort of a follow on question for discussion.A few people around here have given up on perimeter fencing, and their ideas have me thinking. Fence that is not grazed both sides is always a pain anyway. The "new" school of thought is to mow the perimeter (give up trying to graze it and the thought that the animals can do the work), and to set up netting on nice clean grass a few feet inside the field. I tried it on one section this year, and it saved a lot of work. With this method you mow where you are putting the fence, put up the fence, graze it, and move the fence before the grass grows enough to short it out. In your case, you would cut a lane through the brush, and have a clean place to put the fence. In my experience, goats never graze where or on what you want them to, unless you make it painful to do otherwise. The Premier 42 inch tall netting really works as long as you keep it well energized, and free of shorting growth. It is hard to use as a perimeter, because of shorting from the ungrazed side. That is why a foot or two of cleared space outside the fence works so well.



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Re: Fencing
Author: gordon 
Date:   10-31-06 16:20

It is true that netting can short out when setting it up in a high weed load
area. Mowing or clearing a path is best. You can also drive over the load
and set the net up in the tracks.
In cases where this is not working you may need to use a larger energizer
to overcome the weed load.

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