Dunedin wrote: » Cut/strimmed down a number of ditches recently and they all need fencing now. My mains electric fence gives a lot of bother up and down and not realible Would folk go for electric or barbed given I have a clean slate. About a third of it is a mearing (bordering with neighbor) and thinking that three row of baarbed might be the safest there.
bogman_bass wrote: » Don’t go with3 strand go with 4. With 3 they can put their head through while scratching and it’ll go slack
_Brian wrote: » Electric fence is such a simple system there’s no reason for it to be unreliable. Good energiser Well placed earth Good wire, no copper wire Good insulators. Keep growth off fence.
Dunedin wrote: » Sur maybe around 9 Saturday morning. If I’m not around, just belt ahead and let me know when it’s sorted.......!!!
Bass Reeves wrote: » Electric fence all the way. Barbed wire fence is 4-5 times the price. Biggest issue with electric fence is lads will not do a deecnt earth system. 3-4 bars and linked right with proper galvanized eklectric fence wire. keep wire and posts out from ditch so hedge cutter can work inside it. Barbed wire is a nuisance and gaps will always be created
memorystick wrote: » My grandfather fenced a field with thorny wire and it's as good as Fort Knox. Right in the middle of the ditch. I don't know what year he put it up it but he died in 1968.
riemann wrote: » Electric might be quicker to install and cheaper, but all the time over the years clearing back overgrowth and finding faults has a cost too. Great peace of mind with the barb. If I had the money every bit of electric would be replaced in the morning. It's great as a temporary fence, not a permanent one.
Dinzee Conlee wrote: » What kinda posts did he use? The bounds was fenced here with railway sleepers, prob sometime in the 1960s i’d imagine but not really sure... But they are almost gone by now, still, 50+ years isn’t too bad I suppose
Dunedin wrote: » Starting to lean this way too. I seem to spend more and more time ensuring the mains is working. I have 4 earth rods probably connected by an electrician, no leakage anywhere and yet the power seems to be up and down. No doubt electric is fierce handy for paddocks but working towards baarbed for perm and boundary fences
patsy_mccabe wrote: » The downside to external electric fencing is, stock from your neighbours can break in from the other side. Say you stop a field for silage, you will need to keep that part of the fence on all the time and so have to keep grass cut back from it.
memorystick wrote: » Posts!!!!! Penty of good trees and white thorn. There's a healthy ditch up through it.
Bass Reeves wrote: » It is a crime to put barb wire on to trees and Whitethorn.
memorystick wrote: » What's the penalty?
gozunda wrote: » Dead trees unfortunately . The wire will eventually cut through them heart wood and weaken the tree to wind etc . If you have good trees I wouldn't do it that way tbh. Electric fence is what I would suggest - keeps stock away from fence. If it's a bound ditch then certainly used barbed wire to stop stock from elsewhere which might gain access if the fence was off for whatever reason.
memorystick wrote: » Never had it here.