Monday

The Cattle Fencing Guides For Farmers

By Edna Booker


As a farmer, you have to consider fencing your ranch to avoid getting into frequent problems with neighbors when the livestock cross into their properties. This can easily be done; all you need are the basic tips. However, if you are dealing with a large ranch with hundreds or thousands of cattle, then the fencing is a different story. It has to be done so professionally to avoid huge losses that can result from the animals trespassing to the freeway or the neighbor's property. This is when you seek the services of the expert contractors in the area of cattle fencing paddock construction.

For any fence, there are two main requirements. It should be able to contain the livestock inside, and the design should in such way that it achieves the longest possible lifetime. There are many dangers when the cattle are allowed to wander in the neighborhood. In fact, it can get into problems. However, it is even more dangerous if they wander onto the freeway as it can cause a major accident. This means that you have to give a lot of consideration to the materials used and the design of the fence.

The design depends on many things, first the type of livestock and then the number. The cattle need stronger fence, and the fence should be even stronger if you are keeping a high number of cattle per acre. In the same way, a boundary fence must be designed to be stronger than an internal one.

The design to be used is determined by the ranch location, topography, the type and density of livestock, and the budget available for the job. While the internal fences do not have to be very strong, the boundary fence has to be extremely strong. For farmers, there are two main categories of fences; conventional fences and the electric fences. With the electric fence, animals are contained with the psychological barrier of electric shock while the convention fences rely on the physical and visual barriers for deterrence.

There are several designs that can be used and the design a farmer chooses depends on the animal density, the types of animals in the ranch, the topography (presence of steep slopes, hills, and gullies), chances of flooding, and the budget allocated for the job. Generally, the boundary fences have to be strong. If there is a freeway nearby, the fence has to be even stronger. The internal fences for the paddocks on the other hands do not need to be very strong.

When it comes to fencing itself, there are three main elements that you interact with. At every ends, there are strainer assemblies. Then there are wires stretched between the strainers and then there are the intermediate posts to offer support. It is the job of the strainers to transfer the tension in the wire to the ground while the posts and droppers guides the wire and offer the lateral resistance to pressure by transferring the pressure to the ground.

For the conventional fences, each component is bought on its own. For the wire, a farmer can choose the more expensive but easy to install and long lasting prefabricated rolls, the barbed wires, or the plain wires. Each of the types is available in different gauge (strength) and tensile strengths. There are several options the farmers have for the posts. The common ones are the steel (suitable for areas with high risk of fire), the concrete, and the timber (treated and untreated).

By gathering information from the discussion forums and reading the articles that relates to livestock fencing, the farmer can get the ideas to improve of their paddocks and do better jobs in repairing the existing fence.




About the Author:



No comments:

Post a Comment