Wisconsin "Cheeseheads"

Nope can't help with that bl4. We bought one years ago from friends and it was the best house dog, as well as a guard dog. Her bark and position was scary, but if you knew her name, her tail wagged her whole rear end. I would leave the ears and not have them cropped.
Dang wind here was terrible today...hoping for warmer weather soon....almost time to start the garden here.

Stay Safe....bigz
 
Bagged another Tom this morning! More good eating in the future for sure. We really enjoy our wild turkey here.
Hens have really been laying well...sure is a lot of folks enjoying all the fresh eggs.

Stay Safe.... bigz
 
Question for you 'all:

If you had a 3 acre area that you wanted to fence for small livestock (sheep, goat, young calf) and chickens, what kind of fencing would you recommend?
Larger calves/steer will have a different pasture area, this would only be for a bottle calf/bucket calf if necessary to have them accessible. I know plans change, I have worked with plenty of farmers to know how that goes, so who knows what the area will be used for in the distant future but I really only want to put up fencing once.
Would you run a no-climb horse fence? We will never have riding horses, so that seems extreme, but that is what we used for our dog fence in Wyoming. It is a fencing that seems like it will last our lifetime.
 
All the neighbors here that house multiple types of animals use the steel fence posts with a 4 foot high square wire prolly 4"X4" on the bottom and then a single barb wire fence along the top with prolly a 12" space above the bottom section.

Stay Safe... bigz
 
make the fence goat proof. the rest will take care of itself.
I had cyclone fence. someone gave me two goats. withing ten minutes those goats squeezed under the fence and were out. I had to put them back into the fly pen where there was a wooden frame all around the bottom.
barbed wire or stranded wire will not keep goats in. maybe electric fence would. I never tried that. but you need 2x4 " welded wire for chickens.
goats will put their front feet on a fence so it had better be stout or it will eventually stretch and sag.
I never fenced in sheep. Don't know what that takes..
there used to be a fencing with small squares at the bottom and they got larger as they went up to the top. I think it was four feet tall. I think it was called all purpose fencing. ?
my advice is: skip the goats..
......jiminwisc....
 
If I can convince DH to let me get a cow for milk, I would skip the goats in a heartbeat. But I want fresh milk so I can make yogurt, ice cream and real whipped cream for my french silk pie, lol.
DH says absolutely no goats, but he has lost battles before when I was determined to get what I wanted.
 
what you need is a nice small Jersey or Brown Swiss or even a Guernsey..
You aren't going to get much whipped cream from a goat.
Jersey steers make excellent steaks and roasts.
 
the awning roof as far as we got yesterday.
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20200504_124559[1].jpg
 
That looks nice Jim.

I always wanted a Devon or a Dexter for milk and meat. And easy keepers, good on just grazing. I saw an add for Guernsey/Devon crosses. Nice looking cows.
 

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