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Wyvern Stormblad is on a murderous rampage, and Barb Wire is the focus of the drunken disaster's fury. Barb's lost the one weapon capable of dropping the.
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It seems that horses just don't seem to have the kind of common sense to know that. Several neighbors at times use pastures next to ours and they always call first, to be sure we don't have any horses across the fence there. I was just reminded that maybe at times barbwire does grab for you. I was crawling thru the fence after opening the gate to let the horses out a few days ago and my lower pant leg hung up, cutting my pants and my leg right over the ankle and below the knee, cutting my leather glove and also my hand. The lower leg cut probably could have used stitches, but it is healing fine with bandaids.

I am on nine years of ten with my last tetanus shot, so I assume good to go there too. So, yes, there are times barbwire will attack, but I was asking for it right then. Our old vet used to say that horses were hurt less with barbed wire because they respect it and it hurts, when other wire, barbless, cable, hot wire, baling wire, can cut them and they won't notice it right off, before it does much damage.

ANY wire or fences, really are places where a horse can get hurt if it tangles with it, or hits it hard enough. Wire of any kind should be the last of our choices for smaller areas, but for larger ones, if you can't spent what it takes for other so much more expensive kinds of fencing, maybe barb wire is a sensible option, if managed properly. One Vet says one thing If I ever had barbed wire on my property, it'd be replaced. I've heard people say, "well my horse is smart enough to know better" or "my horse respects fences," but even the most respectful horse that is spooked beyond belief has accidents.

If wishes were horses then beggars would ride As in, the majikal butterfly-fahting gypsy vanners. I can't imagine taking it down - especially that much. I'm sure the wire with the barbs on it is just stiff enough to whip around and slash my face if I were to ever try.

Is there any way, with the metal posts, to run a rail across the top of the wire - either wood or some kind of tubular thing for better visibility? Originally posted by mayfair View Post. Originally posted by Tiki View Post. Just a thought. You could ask that the posts remain. While I'd never install barbed wire, I can and do live with what was already here when I bought the place.

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I've replaced a lot of it, and small pastures are barbed wire free that's where the young stupid horses are but it remains along 3 sides of the big pasture, where the old mares spend their time. Injuries are rare and minor- horses usually don't mess with fence in large areas. I really don't have a problem with the stuff in certain situations. You can just buy 10 10' panels and wire them to that fence to protect your horses at less Yes, he can take a joke. After that, the joke's on you. Originally posted by AnotherRound View Post. LOL - not feet - she said acres! But I certainly would consider if the areas are big that the wire would not be a problem, and that adding a hot wire just inside it would be appropriat, along with panels on the corners, or where they might come to the fence on a regular basis.

But my evaluation would be subjective to the particular place. My farm is a tenth of the size of the one in question, but was perimeter fenced with barbed wire when we bought it. I took all the barbed wire down by hand before we moved the horses here.


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I rolled it up, tied the rolls small ones, lots off and took them to the dump. Today if I had to do it over I'd advertise them for free on cl, but I'd still take it down myself. That way I know it's all gone. My neighbor up in Live Oak had a 40 acre pasture fenced with BW. His horses lived there for many, many years with no problem. They were older appys and well used to it. Then about six months before I moved his sweet old mare 28, I think somehow got a leg caught in the fence.

Imagine someone cutting a hind leg off, most of the way, above the hock, with a chain saw. I will never forget the sight of that poor, sweet mare, still alive.

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Nor will I ever forget the sound of the two shotgun blasts it took to take her pain away. It's a personal thing, I guess. But my subconscious will not let me put horses out in barbed wire. Help Contact Us Go to top. Yes No.

Heath Sanders “Blood Sweat and Barbwire Fence”

OK Cancel. Complete Profile Welcome to the Chronicle Forums. Complete Profile Announcement Collapse No announcement yet. We have miles of five wire barbed wire fences here, for cattle and horses and rarely have had an injury. Then, we manage for it, don't just have little pens fenced with it, add hot wire over the top in the small traps and protect the corners with panels. You can just buy 10 10' panels and wire them to that fence to protect your horses at less cost than removing that little stretch, or remove it, should not take you an hour and then put whatever you like there.

But it does if you are working with it, darn sttuff. I'm shocked to read so many people who are not horrified by the existence of barbed wire, I'm usually the lone voice being shouted at and down. We have acres, and the horses have to share the grazing land with the cows, all the big fields are 4 or 5 strand barb wire, the smaller paddocks that still have barb have a hot wire inside them, the smallest of them are hot wired. I have no alternative, the big fields will always be wired just out of practicality, but we are gradually working on getting some safe small turnout areas set up around the yard.

I think that comes down to management. Any badly built and kept fence can cause injuries or loose horses. If your fences in GA are like the ones we had in AL many years ago, I can see why horses get hurt on them, they were very sorry, a few strands of all kinds of material here and there, loose wire, some smooth, some barbed, an accident waiting to happen.

One place had all barbwire, two or three strands and loopy, little 30' by 40' pens on steel posts, no corners, the wire hanging and horses across from each other. Still, in the time I was there, no horse was injured in that.


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Here in the West, most barbed wire fences are five wire, tight and secure and not hiding in brush or beween trees. Sure, if you don't have to use it around horses, if you have other ways to fence your horses, of course there are better fences. If that fence is already there and in good repair and not in a hidden spot, where something may run into it and no horses across that fence to play and get into it, why not work with what you have?

Now, if you really only have ', I will say, wire is very hard to keep tight in that short a distance. You either have to stretch it until it almost breaks, or it will just not stay tight very long. Take it down and put something you won't have by any chance need to regret later, if something gets into it. One of the worst injuries I saw was a horse flipping over a nice board fence and degloving from his knee to into his shoulder. He fell into a snow drift, or he may just have broken his neck also.

Oct 17, 7. Oct 17, 8. No bucks but I just wanted sturdy since we were putting up something new. Thanks for the advice. Oct 17, 9.

Messages: 6, Barb on it's own wont keep a goat in they will climb through. Here is what I did, It works well, keeps them safe, and is pretty inexpensive. I made all the grounds barb. It has worked very well. You could do it with smooth wire but unless you use a really hot charger it wont help with preditors. This was a big consern of mine. Copperhead likes this. Oct 17, And goats do not get cut up? I have seen some big herds well over goats kept in by barbed wire.

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If I remember right most of it was nine strands of wire though. It is possible. I think if I was going to have to run that many strands of wire, I'd just go with high tensile electric. It will keep goats in Personally, I am mostly using Red Brand woven wire, with a strand of electric at shoulder high, just to keep them from rubbing on the fence.

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The rest of my fence is six strand electric. In the long run I think you'd probably be happier with something besides barbed wire, but if that it what you want, it can be done Rowdy , Oct 17, Red brand woven wire- what gave and how high and how many inches spaces? Messages: 3, We have barbed wire with electric fence running inbetween and it's getting ready to all be ripped out and field fence put in.

The goats have learned that if they get a running start and "dive" through the wires as fast as possible there's a good chance they won't get hit. These are very young goats, not the older goats, but we had a doe take some skin off her teat on the barbs. Not good!!! So, all the fence is getting torn out and re-done. Messages: 24, How about using barb-less wire along with electric?

I don't see what barbed wire would do besides cut them up. Minelson , Oct 17, Think we are sold on woven with electric, not much more cost.