Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Sheep again
On Mon, 28 Apr 2003 14:14:06 +0100, "Howard Neil" hneil@REMOVE TO
REPLY.co.uk wrote: If you happen to live on or adjacent to common land and have to live with the sheep, the only sensible way of constraining them is with stock fencing. If you want to know more about such fencing, try http://www.bekaert.com/twil/agricult...lock_broch.htm and ask for the free brochure. It tells you all you will need to know (and a lot more). If you do not like the look of such a fence, you could always hide it Howard Neil Thanks all for your comments. I am shortly to aquire a garden on a new property which is one of five carved out of a field populated by sheep. My rear boundary is a wire fence ( a slightly lower than the suggested 4 feet) 29 Metres in length along which I hoped to grow evergreen shurbs growing to a hight of no more than 4 feet so as to keep the countryside view. However the front of the property is open plan. How about a moat ?. A neighbour who has lived on the site for a few months tells me the sheep are a problem, I noticed her husband has built a five foot timber fence around his new vegetable plot, but I don't have that option. Thanks Paul |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Bloody VERMIN Cats again, and again, and again, and again....:-(((( | United Kingdom | |||
Still eat meat, think the farmers care about their customers or the public? Sheep farms' pesticide t | United Kingdom | |||
Importing Sheep | sci.agriculture | |||
Bloomin sheep eating my blooms. | United Kingdom | |||
Sheep fencing | Australia |