The question below got me to wondering if any of you have experience and thoughts to share on barbed vs. high tensile/electric fences.
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Barbed vs. high tensile wire
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We have used high tensile wire and barb and will never go back to barb. we have ripped out the old barb fences and replaced with tensile.One is forever fixing barb fence,seems to break more so under pressure from cattle or winter snow in our area. Not so with tensile,put a good fencer with lots of ground rods and cows won't go near it once the get jolted. It is faster to put up than barb and you use less posts and your gloves will be in better shape lol. Try it
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Well personally I can't stand high tensile wire and messing around with electricity, but then I'm an old timer and don't buy into a lot of these new fangled ideas!
The boy did this rotational grazing thing on 67 acres and he ran high tensile to split it into 6 paddocks. I got "fried" one day and I'll tell you those souped up fencers give you quite a shot!
Give me a nice "singing tight" four wire barbed fence anyday and you can keep that springy high tensile!
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We use high tensile to divide paddocks, but still have the perimeter done in barb wire. For splitting the corn field up into parcels we use that stringy stuff (I can't remember the proper name LOL), and temporary posts. It seems to work just as well.
One thing about high tensile is it's a real hazard around a horse that doesn't know what it is! We've seen some really bad leg injuries where the wire has peeled the skin back from the hock to the hoof just like peeling a banana. These things take months to heal.
First time my horse was in a paddock with this wire, he walked right through the fence without seeing it, and flipped himself over on his back. Luckily he only had about a four inch long flap of skin to deal with, mostly due to the fact that he was walking when he wiped out. If you're going to use it around horses, make sure they learn under supervision just where it is, and just what it is.
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I was told to stay clear of the 17 gauge stuff - tends to break and tangle around any passing wildlife. I really like the regular high tensile and fibreglass posts although we need to put in light wood posts when we need to cross fence as there is too much give in the fibre glass. Only disadvantage with the fibreglass is that they degrade after a while and you get shards of it in your fingers unless you use gloves to handle them.
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