1
Complete Guide to Fencing Staples
16:15
2
Cattle Psychology and Fences (Part 2)
15:54
3
Cattle Psychology and Fences (Part 1)
16:23
4
Proper Gate Etiquette on a Ranch
13:07
5
Everything to Know About Fence Stetchers
13:30
6
Fence tip: The a-hole knot
3:26
Fence Tip: Livestock Fence Design with Regards to Wildlife
7:48
8
Fence Tip: How to use a T-post Puller
3:38
9
Fence Tip: Splicing Wires, Big Loops vs Small Loops
4:35
10
Fence Tip: Splicing Wire for an Electric Fence
9:33
11
Fence Tip: How to Splice Barbed Wire with Fencing Pliers
12:38
13
Fence tip: How to Build a Wire Gate
25:50
14
How not to Build a Wire Gate
6:32
15
Fence Tip: Complete Guide to T-Post Clips
13:54
16
Everything to know about Figure 4's
13:54

Fence Tip: Livestock Fence Design with Regards to Wildlife

1 year ago
42

Here I’m showing a barbed wire fence I was going around today and how you can better design your livestock fences to include the use of wildlife.

The 3 main animals that I see have an affect on livestock fences are Antelope, Deer, and Elk.

Antelope go under fences, deer go over, and Elk will go over, or through a fence if they get startled enough.

It’s sometimes easier and more cost effective in some situations to not fence out wildlife, but to design fences to allow wildlife to pass through (sometimes guys want to fence out wildlife in hay meadows, which makes sense, so there are exceptions).

Not making your fences super tall helps deer and elk not take out the top wires. Not making you bottom wires super close to the ground, helps antelope. And in high pressure places where wildlife likes to travel, you can coincide making wires looser, but still look like a barrier to cattle. That way wires are less likely to break.

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