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Livestock
Livestock & Forage
Shelter and rotational grazing
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<blockquote data-quote="egbert" data-source="post: 7489585" data-attributes="member: 9965"><p>imagine the labour it takes to set such things up...only for half of it to be torn out decades/centuries later. </p><p>now we're talking about kick starting the same thing all over, only without the shelter!</p><p></p><p>My boundaries up here are all stone, and where we've properly set them right -IE double skinned, head height, and 5' through-, they given fantastic shelter.</p><p>(A slight downside is the £100+/m cost)</p><p>Finding a balance between what can realistically be done now, and what was there 100-200 years ago isn't easy.</p><p>I work on the general principal that, here at least, there's only one person who decides, and that's the man stood in the field, with the cheque book in his pocket.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="egbert, post: 7489585, member: 9965"] imagine the labour it takes to set such things up...only for half of it to be torn out decades/centuries later. now we're talking about kick starting the same thing all over, only without the shelter! My boundaries up here are all stone, and where we've properly set them right -IE double skinned, head height, and 5' through-, they given fantastic shelter. (A slight downside is the £100+/m cost) Finding a balance between what can realistically be done now, and what was there 100-200 years ago isn't easy. I work on the general principal that, here at least, there's only one person who decides, and that's the man stood in the field, with the cheque book in his pocket. [/QUOTE]
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Shelter and rotational grazing
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