Ranyhyn
Well-Known Member
Hope someone can help throw some ideas into the mix here please!
We have 20 acres of sloping grazing. Divided into 3 fields. The drainage is VERY poor (we're talking 3 days of rain and we're saturated to the point even a human's foot pools in water
) at the bottoms on the fields. At the tops of the fields and inbetween are mature oak trees. In total in all of our boundaries I'd say more than 15. not to mention a few yews that border our land.
This means we're having to electric fence paddocks through the winter, to keep horses away from the trees. This presents a few issues:
1) no mains electric means battery powered = not that much of a whack (?)
2) rugged horses reach over leccy fencing.
3) no cover
4) no water (our fields are fed by streams but these run adjacent to the tree lines)
I made a small paddock close to the "stables" for my horses, which they have now trashed
so we need to go back to the drawing board.
Anyway, here's a photo to give you an idea (this is taken from the end of our farm, looking back towards the house, the three fields run in a line)
The only thing I can come up with is to properly, permanently electic fence it - when I say properly I mean with a fieldguard system, not the cheapy white post things.
Any other suggestions with how to work it autumn-spring would be appreciated.
My other suggestion was move

We have 20 acres of sloping grazing. Divided into 3 fields. The drainage is VERY poor (we're talking 3 days of rain and we're saturated to the point even a human's foot pools in water
This means we're having to electric fence paddocks through the winter, to keep horses away from the trees. This presents a few issues:
1) no mains electric means battery powered = not that much of a whack (?)
2) rugged horses reach over leccy fencing.
3) no cover
4) no water (our fields are fed by streams but these run adjacent to the tree lines)
I made a small paddock close to the "stables" for my horses, which they have now trashed
Anyway, here's a photo to give you an idea (this is taken from the end of our farm, looking back towards the house, the three fields run in a line)
The only thing I can come up with is to properly, permanently electic fence it - when I say properly I mean with a fieldguard system, not the cheapy white post things.
Any other suggestions with how to work it autumn-spring would be appreciated.
My other suggestion was move