Well I didn't get very far with panoramic. You have to press the button and then turn around on the spot 360 degrees, which I can play back on the camera, but is not really as good as taking video. When I downloaded it to the computer I get a piccie a couple of mm vertically and totally useless.
So I took 3 stills for you instead.
You will love my baling twine gate closer. LOL that is because if you shut the gate with its own catch and there is a bit of moisture in the morning you will get zapped.
I have no idea what is on the fence post. Maybe orange peel put there from hubby if he ate an orange off the orange tree, or maybe a melon put their by a weaner!!!!
The orange tape will keep a horse in the houseyard out of the orchard, but not any cattle. There was a fence there which hubby removed with my protesting when we first moved in. Sigh.
First is our paddock that we have seeded lucerne. There is an aisle to the left of this paddock and that is our boundary fence. The irrigator is still down there on the left front of the green. The little square of water is not a dam, the next bit of water is the dam until you can see a bit of vegetation in the water. The rest is just water on the ground left over from the floods. From the weaners eating the two round bales I put out yesterday over the whole of the green and down to the road was underwater when we were flooded.
This is the next photo so there should be no water on the ground and you actually can't see that water from the road. You have to come up our road to see it. The 'island' on the right is where I fed out some round bales yesterday. The paddocks you see the cattle in are now only grass that have had frost on them and so the grass is now dead. Beyond that is our long paddock that we have started ploughing.
You can see our boundary fence on this photo from our paddock to the paddock next door that has no cattle on it, so is now a haven for snakes for my neighbour whose house in the middle of it and only owns the house yard. This is the paddock we would have liked to buy to put our cattle when we flood, but alas it never came up for sale. The council gave it to someone to take their land for the Wyaralong Dam. We did ask if we could put our cattle in there while they were starving above the house during the flood for 2 - 3 months, but were told no as they were keeping it empty so as no ticks.
Our cattle are injected with dectomax that kills internal and external parasites. Our cattle do not have ticks and obviously if our cattle did have ticks that magic barbed wire fence must stop them going next door. Now that the grass in there has frosted it will also be a fire hazard for our neighbours house that is in the middle of it.
Our boundary fence goes down through the lagoon. We own about 1/3 of it, and then goes down to the bridge and we lease back the other side of the creek from the Waterboard.