Cross-7":3k3xx90i said:Poly wire, rope fencing or ?
I need something quick and easy.
Step in post. Up for a day or two and roll it up on a reel and roll it out somewhere else.
What the best most durable ?
skyhightree1":ppwjtii3 said:Cross-7":ppwjtii3 said:Poly wire, rope fencing or ?
I need something quick and easy.
Step in post. Up for a day or two and roll it up on a reel and roll it out somewhere else.
What the best most durable ?
I personally hate poly wire/rope and will only use smooth electric wire and my choice is Bekaert 14 gauge.
M-5":1h1kk0ip said:skyhightree1":1h1kk0ip said:Cross-7":1h1kk0ip said:Poly wire, rope fencing or ?
I need something quick and easy.
Step in post. Up for a day or two and roll it up on a reel and roll it out somewhere else.
What the best most durable ?
I personally hate poly wire/rope and will only use smooth electric wire and my choice is Bekaert 14 gauge.
Is the hate just toward the white poly or is it include the black and yellow too.
Texas PaPaw":w8w9rhzf said:I use lots of polywire with stepin posts. Get most of mine from Kencove. Most of what can be bought locally is junk. Once hotwire trained you have a lot of options. 2 people with a string of polywire between them become a moving fence. Easy to build wings and lanes to make penning cattle a 1 man job. Wouldn't run cattle without hotwire.
100% with you all the way around.Texas PaPaw":2k26iohz said:I use lots of polywire with stepin posts. Get most of mine from Kencove. Most of what can be bought locally is junk. Once hotwire trained you have a lot of options. 2 people with a string of polywire between them become a moving fence. Easy to build wings and lanes to make penning cattle a 1 man job. Wouldn't run cattle without hotwire.
Banjo":naiwy0hs said:You gotta get them cattle really tight in order to not be selective and trample everything down, which amounts to moving them 4 or 5 times a day or more.
So I just let em have what they want and clip what they don't eat......to keep it fresh. if you have cool season grasses like fescue....what they don't like now they will love this winter.
Draper":2pzbonfa said:Banjo":2pzbonfa said:You gotta get them cattle really tight in order to not be selective and trample everything down, which amounts to moving them 4 or 5 times a day or more.
So I just let em have what they want and clip what they don't eat......to keep it fresh. if you have cool season grasses like fescue....what they don't like now they will love this winter.
OR just provide them the amount of acreage needed to accomplish the goal with once per day moves.