The Accidental Smallholder Forum
Livestock => Pigs => Topic started by: loosey on May 14, 2010, 04:15:37 pm
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My OH thinks electric fencing only. I'm thinking Stock fencing with electric tape low to doscourage them rooting underneath!
What do you use and what are your experiences? ???
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I have stock fencing and use electric wire to keep them off of that and also to make smaller areas within the stock fence. I would be worried if there was no proper fence to keep mine away from the roads etc and to keep them out of the yard.
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I use post and rail with stock fencing, but as the adults tend to lay and lean on the posts we run an electric tape all around too. They have access to a small paddock too but that just has 2 strips of electric wire, IF the battery went down they can still only get into an adjoining paddock. My friend uses electric wire only which is great til someone nicks the battery and they all get out!! ::)
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We use stock fencing with a single strand of electric wire about a foot off the ground, on stand-off insulators so it's about 8 inches away from the stock fence. We also have a strand of electric going across the gate so there's no chance of them lifting it off its hinges! ;)
Mic
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Two or three strands of electric wire only except in the piglet training paddocks which has both. However our boar touched the electric fence and went through both it and the stock fence, he used such force that it unravelled. We have fencing with George shaped holes now.
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Stock fencing and barbed wire. Keeps pigs in and dogs out, so far. Will be reinforcing with electric fence as and when necessary. I hate barbed wire, but so do pigs and its more reliable than batteries!
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We use electric tape fencing - started with 2 strands but as the pigs have got bigger we have dispensed with the low strand. If the pigs did escape our smallholding is entirely stockfenced around the final perimeter so it would be a case of the pigs having a grand old time in the rest of the field as opposed to getting onto roads or neighbours' land. As far as we are concerned the advantage of the electric fence is that we can easily change the size of the pig area, and when we have a break in the pig keeping we can incorporate the whole area into the rest of the field for whatever we want without haveing to deal with fenced off areas.
:pig: :)
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we have a mini version of our goat-proof fencing... half pallets topped with stock fencing.
we've recently had to add extra battens to stop them squashing down the wire - now they are full grown the biggest manage to topple over like a weeble and go walk abouts!
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As ours are in a permanent field we've got stock fencing with a strand of barbed wire round the bottom to (hopefully) stop them rooting it up. Had too many escape attempts from my weaners with the battery powered electric fence to trust it with fully grown kune kunes :(
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I've got stock fencing with 2 low strands of electrified wire to discouage digging under. The electric wire is held away from the stock fencing about 4 inches so it keeps them well away. Touch wood nobproblems at all so far.
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same as sudanpan really, weaner's take some training tho and they defiantly know when the battery needs a charge! ::)
Altho we do have a sow who wont cross the line where her tape has been even if we have moved it to give her more room!! it takes a lot of food and patience to move her!!!
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I have stock fencing with a barbed wire strand on the ground. Seems to have worked OK....well so far anyway! :)
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I have mains fencing, found the battery unreliable. :pig: Hilary always knew when it was weak.
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we have three british saddleback pigs for the last six months and we have used the electric strip
fencing.
in those six months only one of our pigs has managed to get out three times, not to far either.
i think that is pretty impressive as i wanted the more expensive at the beginning but my wife kept
reminding me of our budget! ( where would we be without you!)
you have your plastic post for putting in the ground, you have your battery to run it and
you have your three strips of electric bands.
we got it on molevalley.com
i have to say as said in the beginning i was very doutfull, but would recommend it.
good luck with what ever you choose.
langdon :pig:
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stock fencing and 2 strsnds electric . save money on insulaters cut blue water pipe 8 inch stips flattern 1 end nail to post drill hole in other end and feed wire through .
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Stock fencing down the permanent sides of their enlcosures, which has a single strand at the bottom then three strands for the different paddocks which are rotated to give them a rest. I do use permament posts with insulators on to enable me to get the electrical tape massively taught on the temporary paddocks - stops the little (2 x one year old GOS Sows) blighters from escaping and the kune kune getting in!
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we have three british saddleback pigs for the last six months and we have used the electric strip
fencing.
in those six months only one of our pigs has managed to get out three times, not to far either.
i think that is pretty impressive as i wanted the more expensive at the beginning but my wife kept
reminding me of our budget! ( where would we be without you!)
you have your plastic post for putting in the ground, you have your battery to run it and
you have your three strips of electric bands.
we got it on molevalley.com
i have to say as said in the beginning i was very doutfull, but would recommend it.
good luck with what ever you choose.
langdon :pig:
Our relationship works in the exact opposite way tyhat yours does! I think I'm going to be overruled and that we'll be trying to electric fencing only to start. On the plus side, the type of pigs we are going to have are known for being fairly liad back so fingers crossed! I'm sure we'll learn any lessons which need to be learnt the hard way!!
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Electric fencing only. One strand at about5 inches - top one high enough to catch humans only ocasionally straddling the enclosure to feed the pigs! :o Never had an escapee (so far...) although my Berkshires don't seem to learn that if they charge towards me they have to stop at the green stripe!