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SHeep and Goat fence design
Author: EJB 
Date:   06-14-04 14:51

I need to setup about 2200 feet of permanent boundary fence for sheep and goats. I am leaning towards your design with 32inch woven wire and two strands of smooth above it (all greencote). I also may add the barbed wire at the bottom and offset two more electric lines later...

I have a few questions though.

A local dealer stronly suggested to me that 9inch verticals is way to big and lambs.kids will get out, and coyotes will squeeze thru...he suggests using the Bekaert 48 inch w/6 verticals instead. (fixed knot).

I notice that the greencote from premier is hinged joint, not fixed knot. What makes one better than the other?

Also, some of the areas I need to fence are wet, so the bottom portion of the fence may be wet for a few months a year (not running water, standing water). Will this affect the lide of the fence?

Corners seem to add a lot of expense to the setup, i.e. with the full cost of a double H brace etc...if I have trees in the right place, should I use them instead? Will that be just as god? better? or worse? Of course it would save me money, but will it last as long, and what method should I use to attach to trees?

Thats it for now! Thanks.

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RE: SHeep and Goat fence design
Author: Scott 
Date:   06-15-04 14:19

The reason we like the 9" verticals is that when a sheep does stick their head through the fence they can get their head out without becoming trapped as they can and have with 6" vertical spacing. The difference with hinge joint (verticals wrapped every horizontal) and fixed knot (continuous wire top to bottom strand with wire knot every horizontal) is the fixed knot is a stiffer material. With the shorter woven wires, Premier has not found big advantages to the fixed knot to offset the cost difference. Wet/very damp areas will cause accelerated corrosion on any metal material. The GreenCote & GoldCote wires should hold up better in moist conditions than regular class III galvanized material because of their extra rust inhibiting coatings. Corners and End assemblies do add lots of cost to a fence system. Using trees can be done but we normally do not. The use of trees can cause tensioning problems because of the shape of the tree (bigger diameter at bottom) than 3' up make system very difficult to keep verticals in vertical position. Also keeping the tree from growing around the wire and not pushing the wire out as the tree grows can cause corrosion problems because of the moisture in the tree. Personal preference is to not use trees. Will the tree outlast the brace post system?? Good question?

Thanks
Scott

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RE: SHeep and Goat fence design
Author: Barbara Lewis 
Date:   07-02-04 22:24

I am getting three sheep - plan to move them around frequently. What is the size, most convenient, least expense fence/battery that I will need?

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