Today I finally put this column. The second curve next to it is that it did not bend from gravity, it was just a curve from the very beginning. But I used it because it is oak, quite strong and good log. I did not clean the bark, because I suspect that the goats will most likely clean it themselves (and eat it). They always eat bark and even gnaw on wood. sometimes I think that these are not goats, but some kind of beavers.
The floor is reinforced concrete. Next to the pillars are the remains of absolutely rotten wooden flooring, covered with manure. To be honest, I have not yet decided what to do with it - either remove it and throw it away, or leave it until next year, removing only the manure.
Here I have removed the rotten wood floors and replaced them with new flooring for the goats to sleep on.
In principle, for the future, I'm thinking of removing all rotten floors, leaving a bare concrete floor (on which the goats constantly drop hay anyway), and making raised wooden decks around the edges and corners so that the goats can sleep on them.
The goat territory is separated from the chicken racks by such a fence. I installed these bars in the winter, but it is already noticeable that the goats began to gnaw them. I do not know how long they will last, I hope that at least a couple of years.
I no longer began to make such structures from simple boards - this is a beam of 15x15 cm, 15x10 cm and 10x10 cm.
While I'm thinking. It is necessary to place two more pillars near this iron column and the oak pillar in order to make a raised feeder there between them, and under it - place another small floor so that some goat can sleep there. Only I have not yet decided what to do - I have a 15x15 cm pine beam, but it is not new, the goats will quickly ruin it. There is also an oak growing on the site, which rather depresses my plantings of gooseberries, and I think someday I will remove it.
So I have not decided yet - whether to use a pine beam, or to dump this oak and take logs from it. Oak logs are noticeably more durable than pine logs. Perhaps today I will ask the parents what they think about this oak, cut it down or how.
I also have a few oaks on the site, I will not cut them, they do not interfere with anything. And that oak grows too close to the gooseberry plantations and oppresses them.
We love gooseberry jam, so the oak will probably have to be sacrificed. It is not very large, but it will be enough for a couple of logs.
Of course, it would be possible to buy just iron pipes or a channel, but I am unemployed and have little money. In principle, i can find some work here, but I don’t want to, I’m too lazy
The work will take too much time, and I have a lot of housework to do.
Therefore, probably, I will not work, but I will simply put up either pine beams, or I will cut down this oak and take the logs.
Well, I'll think about the issue of logs tomorrow, and tonight I'll calmly preserve these cucumbers. In addition, I have apples and I need to make a compote and preserve it too.
The floor is reinforced concrete. Next to the pillars are the remains of absolutely rotten wooden flooring, covered with manure. To be honest, I have not yet decided what to do with it - either remove it and throw it away, or leave it until next year, removing only the manure.
Here I have removed the rotten wood floors and replaced them with new flooring for the goats to sleep on.
In principle, for the future, I'm thinking of removing all rotten floors, leaving a bare concrete floor (on which the goats constantly drop hay anyway), and making raised wooden decks around the edges and corners so that the goats can sleep on them.
The goat territory is separated from the chicken racks by such a fence. I installed these bars in the winter, but it is already noticeable that the goats began to gnaw them. I do not know how long they will last, I hope that at least a couple of years.
I no longer began to make such structures from simple boards - this is a beam of 15x15 cm, 15x10 cm and 10x10 cm.
While I'm thinking. It is necessary to place two more pillars near this iron column and the oak pillar in order to make a raised feeder there between them, and under it - place another small floor so that some goat can sleep there. Only I have not yet decided what to do - I have a 15x15 cm pine beam, but it is not new, the goats will quickly ruin it. There is also an oak growing on the site, which rather depresses my plantings of gooseberries, and I think someday I will remove it.
So I have not decided yet - whether to use a pine beam, or to dump this oak and take logs from it. Oak logs are noticeably more durable than pine logs. Perhaps today I will ask the parents what they think about this oak, cut it down or how.
I also have a few oaks on the site, I will not cut them, they do not interfere with anything. And that oak grows too close to the gooseberry plantations and oppresses them.
We love gooseberry jam, so the oak will probably have to be sacrificed. It is not very large, but it will be enough for a couple of logs.
Of course, it would be possible to buy just iron pipes or a channel, but I am unemployed and have little money. In principle, i can find some work here, but I don’t want to, I’m too lazy

Therefore, probably, I will not work, but I will simply put up either pine beams, or I will cut down this oak and take the logs.
Well, I'll think about the issue of logs tomorrow, and tonight I'll calmly preserve these cucumbers. In addition, I have apples and I need to make a compote and preserve it too.