Please order online 24/7 or call VALLEY FARM SUPPLY at 717-786-0368
November 29, 2013
November 29, 2013
Please order online 24/7 or call VALLEY FARM SUPPLY at 717-786-0368
November 29, 2013
Animal control is perhaps the most widely recognized reason for power fencing. Not only does power fencing keep domestic animals and livestock contained, it has various other important uses, including:
Power fencing has revolutionized pasture management techniques and better pasture management means better profitability for farmers. Permanent or portable power fences are used to subdivide pasture to ensure even distribution of manure over grazing areas. In this way, pastures are kept fresh, short and palatable which ultimately leads to increased milk and meat production.
Other key benefits of power fencing:
For convenient, economical animal control, improved pasture management and more profitable farming, a Gallagher Power Fence System is the trusted solution.
Please order online 24/7 or call VALLEY FARM SUPPLY at 717-786-0368
November 29, 2013
Small Acreage Pasture Management: Part II
One of the first considerations in any grazing system is stock water. Its availability will dictate which pastures you can utilize. Some grazing systems drag tanks from paddock to paddock, but a more permanent water point that incorporates cross-fencing or a common lane to water more than one paddock at a time is more convenient. It lets you keep a closer eye on the water source and cuts down the time involved in managing it. If you’re in a cold winter region, don’t forget to run electricity to the tank location. We all have better things to do than chop ice all winter!
Next, you will need some type of fencing, unless you’re willing to herd your animals from plant to plant. Electric fencing as the most cost-effective method of controlling the time your stock graze a given area. Today there are many types of animal containment systems, and the choices can be daunting. Any system worth its salt will have technical advice available for the potential user; maybe even on-the-ground help. Don’t hesitate to ask for help with a grazing plan, watering plan, and fence design and placement.
There are fencing configurations that allow control of many species, including horses, cattle, sheep and goats. Another factor that will influence the fence design is the presence of wildlife. A fence that must coexist with deer or elk may have a substantially different design that one that does not. Let’s look closer at some specific designs.
Perimeter Fencing
For the perimeter of the pasture, use permanent, multi-strand, high-tensile electric systems. The number of wires will vary according to the livestock you wish to contain. Horses and mature cattle can quite often get by with three wires, while small calves, sheep and goats may take five or six.
The best posts to use in areas with snow loads and wildlife has been proven to be solid fiberglass. There are no plastic insulators to break, and the flexibility of the post helps to overcome side loads.
There are two common mistakes that people tend to make when trying high-tensile fencing for the first time:
Posts too close!
Wires too tight!
Post spacings of around 50 feet are adequate because of the nature of high-tensile wire. The wires should be tightened just to the point of removing most of the sag between posts (around 150 to 200 lbs. per wire). This accomplishes two things. First, this design is flexible, allowing the fence to absorb wildlife pressure and snow loads without breaking. Second, less materials are needed so the initial purchase cost and the labor required to install the electric fence is less than conventional fencing.
Interior Cross-fencing
A mixture of high-tensile permanent and portable polywires and tapes often prove to be the best choices for cross fences. Try to create paddocks by placing several permanent cross-fences on obvious topographical changes, not forgetting to include stockwater inside the paddock, or access down a lane to the water. If you are grazing irrigated pasture, ditches can also be your water source. Two wires are usually adequate for mature cattle and larger calves, while three wires are a better choice for horses or cattle with smaller calves.
Use portable polywires and polytapes on handy reels for your internal fencing. There are many portable post types to choose from. Plastic treadins with multiple wire lugs to be the most adaptable. They can be placed on 30-50 foot spacings, and the wires tightened by hand. On irrigated pasture with horses and mature cattle, one charged wire may be sufficient, but when on dry soils or winter-grazing on frozen soil or dry snow, you may need to use several wires, alternating the polarity between hot – ground – hot, etc. By carrying the ground out to the animal via a wire, you remove poor grounding as a source of problems.
Try not to graze and rest each paddock the same number of days regardless of the growth stage of the forage. Aim for the shortest grazing period per paddock needed to harvest the available forage, say one to four days, then a minimum 30 day rest period during fast plant growth. As plant growth slows, then adjust to five to ten days grazing and 60 to 80 days of rest per paddock. You can see why multiple paddocks are needed to reach these levels of rest, but by subdividing with portable electric fencing, it becomes achievable.
There are also a few things to consider that really help in maintenance and troubleshooting. The first is how the fences are energized. The heart of any electric fence system is the power source, or energizer. A 110-volt plug-in energizer versus a battery or solar unit is generally the best choice. More of your dollars can go to power and not batteries, solar panels, etc.
A battery unit is a great choice if you don’t have 110-volt power available. Also, get specific recommendations as to the size of the energizer by matching it to the job at hand: How long is the perimeter fence? What type of animal are you controlling? Does the fence run through high vegetation? Will you add on to the system eventually? All these questions will help your supplier match an energizer to your needs.
Lastly, consider investing in a digital voltmeter designed to monitor your fences and energizer. They are handheld meters that measure the voltage output of the energizer, or at any point along the fenceline. They are invaluable in diagnosing any problems that may crop up.
I hope this gives you a bit of familiarity with what equipment and techniques are available to help in establishing your grazing plan. There is definitely a bit of work and a learning curve involved, but seeing your critters hock-deep in lush grass while your neighbors are forking hay (and forking out dollars, too!) can be priceless!
Please order online 24/7 or callVALLEY FARM SUPPLYat 717-786-0368
November 29, 2013
When Is A Scale Not A Scale? When It’s An Ernie™ 700
Scott Reynolds, a DVM at the Broken Bow Animal Hospital in Broken Bow, Nebraska, handles most of the cattle within a 70-mile radius of this central Nebraska farm community. It’s a big job helping care for 15,000 to 20,000 animals per year.
Along with the usual care supplied by DVM’s, he helps his clients collect data - everything from sex, age, and pregnancy, whatever is deemed important by the rancher – and it varies by the season.
Spring and fall are our busy seasons,” he said, “and the information a rancher needs to run his business changes with the season.”
“We started trying to collect the data from ear tags with wireless readers then tried those small handhelds. We had lots of problems. Battery life was terrible, some of the equipment wasn’t sturdy enough, and data entry on those little handhelds while wearing gloves was just about impossible.
Screen view and service were also problems with the equipment. Breakdowns during the very busy calving season were unacceptable.
Last year, he tested the Gallagher ernie™ 700. “I’d known about the company for 4 or 5 years and saw their equipment in the area,” he said.
Although its primary function is as a scale, Reynolds liked the fact that it was designed to capture other data. “We could quickly reprogram it to record any kind of data our clients wanted,” said Reynolds. “It’s a very flexible piece of equipment and reprogramming it is simple.”
The scale is moved constantly from farm to farm and subjected to some times harsh treatment. Although it’s rugged enough to withstand a lot of abuse, Reynolds was concerned at first about service if he experienced a problem.
I had some service problems with equipment from other companies, especially when I would get caught in one of those automated answering systems,” he said, “but what I liked about Gallagher was I could call them and talk to a real person right away. I’ve been impressed with their service and responsiveness.”
We use ernie™ like a very durable lap top and it works. With EID continuing to grow, it will become more important to us.”
Just a few of the ways an ernie can help you.
During A.I. season, an ernie can keep track of all your breeding details. When A.I. is complete, the information can be downloaded from your ernie to your computer to create one spreadsheet with all your A.I. Records
Calving Book
Make calving easier by using an ernie to set up the fields of information you want to collect. Simply enter the data and download your calving records into your computer. Saves you hours of hand entering your records.
Preg Checking
An ernie can also help with preg checking. Set up the fields you want to collect and enter the data. After downloading to your computer, you have one easy to read spreadsheet with detailed information on each animal being monitored.
Hay
Use an ernie to help track your hay crop cutting and quality by entering the data into customizable fields. You can then use that information to better track where the different cuttings and quality of feed are being used.
Crop Monitoring
An ernie can be used as a monitoring device for any field crop — corn, beans, peanuts, cotton, any crop — simply build the template for the information you want to collect and monitor.
Garden/Farmers Market
An ernie works great to collect and maintain planting, production and sales information on your personal garden or your Farmers Market garden.
Please order online 24/7 or callVALLEY FARM SUPPLYat 717-786-0368
November 29, 2013
Cattle Update: Small Acreage Pasture Management
“Do you know anyone that has extra pasture for lease? I’m a little short this year.”
It’s a common question heard all the time about a common problem; especially during the last few years of drought out West. Sometimes the answer may be a little closer to home than you may think.
Those of us who pasture livestock - whether one 4-H horse or hundreds of beef cattle - are in reality, grass farmers. We raise and care for grass plants which are then harvested by our animals. That grass plant’s health, and ultimately the soil’s water and mineral cycles, are directly related to the type and duration of grazing we allow. Notice I say “we allow.” If your critters are dictating how you let them graze, there is a better way!
Grasses have evolved over eons in a direct response to grazing. In fact, grass needs grazing, fire, or some other type of removal to survive. It is one of the few plants whose growth point is located in its base, and not the top. Most other plants, shrubs and trees growth points are located at their top, and if you remove it, their growth pattern is severely altered. They tend to stool out or even curtail growth entirely. Not so with the grass plant. It’s built to not only survive grazing, but thrive with it, if managed properly.
Let’s examine what happens to an individual grass plant when grazed. This plant has one mission in its life, and that is to reproduce by going to seed. Most grasses stop or radically slow their growth when they head out and produce seed. But, as long as soil and moisture conditions are favorable, this plant will continue growing and attempting to produce that seed every time it is grazed. The key is rest; the recovery period between grazings. If the plant is grazed a second time too quickly, before the leaf area is large enough to support growth, it has to dip into its root reserves, and the plant’s health and production declines. This is actually a good definition of overgrazing: Biting an individual grass plant a second time, before it has had adequate time to recover from the first bite. Giving that plant a little time between bites will build root mass, leaf production, and boost plant vigor. If you don’t, the results are dwindling roots, slower leaf growth, the inability to recover from grazing, and lots of bare soil.
Do you know any good examples of this scenario? How about your lawn? Is it thicker and fuller than your pasture? I bet it is because you’re “harvesting” it by mowing it regularly all summer! You can do the same with your pasture by changing from season-long grazing to “rotational” or “intensive” grazing.
The easiest way to subdivide your pasture into paddocks and begin rotational grazing is with modern electric fencing. Portable electric polywire can let you match the speed of your rotation to the growth of the plant. This is a critical step because grasses grow faster in the spring when soil moisture peaks, and then slower for the remainder of the hotter and drier summer season.
It’s critical to rotate “fast during fast growth, slow during slow growth.”
Think about this for a minute. If the objective is to graze the plant once, then rest it adequately so growth can resume without dipping into its root reserves before it is bitten again, that’s a rule that stands to reason. A plant that is actively growing will recover faster than one that is in the slower summer growth phase.
During the winter, plants are not actively growing and grazing will not hurt root reserves because they’re dormant. Grazing can be beneficial as it removes old leaf matter and clears the way for a fresh start for the plant come spring.
So, what benefits will you realize from rotational grazing?
Tighter plant spacings.
Improved soil fertility.
New plants started by hoof action.
Faster manure breakdown.
Less fly and pest bother.
Higher production (meat, milk, wool, etc.) per acre.
Stockpiled grass for winter grazing – less hay expense!
Many people report the ability to graze their animals at twice the normal stocking rate per acre, or more. You can get started with rotational grazing with an inexpensive electric fence from Gallagher.
Please order online 24/7 or callVALLEY FARM SUPPLYat 717-786-0368
November 24, 2013
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November 24, 2013
Gallagher Key Account Manager Kevin Marquand says Gallagher Stock Prods have been used successfully in Australia for several years and are often spotted in the hands of transport operators loading stock after livestock sales. "Aussie truckies rave about them, and more and more farmers are using them in cattle yards because they keep stock moving and save valuable time in the yard."
Two models of Gallagher Stock Prods - the SG 150 and the SG 250 - have been launched into the New Zealand market. "With Gallagher Stock Prods performing so well across the ditch, we thought it was time they were offered to New Zealand farmers and truckies."
Used sensibly, Gallagher Stock Prods are an effective tool for working with cattle and a safe and reliable alternative to a big stick. They are also extremely durable. "They can handle getting knocked around better than most other makes, and that's why they have become first choice in Australia."
Kevin says one of the best things about a Stock Prod is that it enables the user to keep some distance between them and the stock. He says the Stock Prod can be used simply as a poker, or, if needed, a squeeze of the trigger will deliver a quick-but-safe electrical 'zap' to get the animal moving in the right direction.
Gallagher Stock Prods are available with three removable shaft lengths - 55, 82 and 107 cm (includes unit) to suit different operating environments. These shafts are built for flexibilty to reduce the risk of damage. While the Gallagher Stock Prod 150 is powered by disposable batteries, the Stock Prod 250 features a rechargable battery and is supplied with a bonus car recharger. "The advantage of the 250 model for stock truck operators is that they can charge the unit while travelling between yards," says Kevin. "If they've got two Stock Prod, they can have one on charge while they are using the other."
The Stock Prod 250 also features a button safety clip and a patented one-piece moulded handle for durability and moisture resistance. Both models are well ballanced and very comfortable to use. They incorporate smart motor technology. a water resistant casing and sealed battery chamber. Their special design also means they can be safely and effectively used on wet animals. Kevin Marquand says Gallagher Stock Prods are available through Gallagher stockist nationwide. |
November 24, 2013
Bay of Plenty miniature horse breeder Colleen Phillips reckons the Gallagher SmartFence is the most versatile and practical invention ever devised for lifestyle block owners.
Until they bought their SmartFence two years ago, Colleen and her husband Shayne were struggling to keep the ten miniature horses on their 8ha block behind a temporary fence.
Good fencing is essential for miniature horses, says Colleen, because they can get fat very easily. “Our problem was that our paddocks were so big we had to use pigtail standards and a single tape to break the paddocks down. But when the grass got low the miniatures would just walk under the fence.” But at a Farmlands Expo two years ago Shayne and Colleen found the perfect solution to this annoying problem – the Gallagher SmartFence.
Made from high quality components, the SmartFence is an all-in-one four-wire, 10-post, 100-metre long fence that provides an extremely effective stock barrier for small animals in a wide range of farming situations. Unlike the traditional temporary fencing systems that utilise multiple reels and standards that can be difficult to handle and clumsy to install, the SmartFence is easy to transport and simple to put up, even for users with no prior experience of temporary fencing. After the product was demonstrated at the Expo, Colleen and Shayne knew it was exactly what they needed. “Our problems were fixed instantly with the Gallagher SmartFence. It’s higher than a conventional temporary fence and because it has four wires, our miniature horses can’t walk under it.”
Though it is not recommended as a permanent fencing solution for larger horses, Colleen says even the 17-hand Clydesdale on their farm respects the SmartFence and will not step over it. “Problems solved, and we had more grass!” The SmartFence’s integrated and ready-to-go four-wire system means the user simply needs to pull the standards out one at a time, placing them in the ground at their preferred distance. A self-tensioning system in the unique single reel ensures that tension is evenly maintained on all four wires. This prevents tangles when the fence is being set up or reeled back in.
Colleen says the SmartFence, which weighs less than 6kg (excluding the Energizer), is very easy to use. “It’s nice and light and compact, so it’s just a matter of picking it up and away you go. There’s no more struggling with tapes and standards. The tapes unwind out to make a premade fence and you can place your standards as far apart as you like.” Colleen says the SmartFence is the ideal solution for lifestyle farmers wanting to improve stock control and pasture management. “It’s fantastic because you can divide a paddock in no time at all, and give stock as little or as much grass as you want. It’s great for miniature horses and we’ve also used it for keeping horses temporarily contained at shows.”
Colleen and Shayne bought their SmartFence through Farmlands Rotorua. “The team there were extremely helpful and the Gallagher representative at the Expo was brilliant. He even gave us a demonstration outside!” Gallagher Territory Manager Darrell Jones says the SmartFence is becoming a very popular tool for lifestyle farmers.
“People love it because it’s a very effective four-wire fence that can be put up or taken down in just minutes.” While principally used for controlling farm livestock, the SmartFence also has other potential applications that include vineyard grazing, tree protection and dog control. Colleen Phillips is certainly sold on the SmartFence’s benefits. “The Gallagher SmartFence is a fantastic asset to have. Once you use one, you will never look back.”
November 24, 2013
Wellington Zoo has installed a SmartPower MBX electric fence system to make sure there is no monkey business in the chimpanzee enclosure.
Known for their intelligence and almost human-like behaviour, chimpanzees are a popular attraction at the zoo.
Mammal curator Simon Eyre says the zoo’s twelve chimps spend much of their time in an outside enclosure which is about 800-900 square metres in size.
Electric fencing around the top of the enclosure acts as a gentle deterrent to any chimpanzee with plans to travel further a field.
This fencing is powered by Gallagher’s innovative SmartPower MBX system – a highly intelligent mains-powered energizer with a battery backup.
SmartPower monitors voltage levels and sends out an instant alert if voltage levels in the fence vary from the norm. Simon Eyre says the zoo’s system will soon be fitted with an auto-dialler that dials the cell phone numbers of on-duty staff the second any problem is detected.
He says the system gives staff peace of mind because they know the enclosure is protected from breach from both the inside and the outside.
Electric fencing is an important part of modern zoo security and Simon says Wellington Zoo has around a dozen separate electric fence systems - all incorporating Gallagher components.
November 23, 2013
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Please order online 24/7 or call VALLEY FARM SUPPLY at 717-786-0368