Hi guys,
I have three paddocks in a line, each approximately 400 x 600'. The internal fences between these are useless, so I am thinking that rather than replacing them, I will form a single large 400 x 1800 paddock and use portable electric fences to do a paddock shift arrangement (we call this "strip grazing" in Australia). I have been using the portable fencing gear to divide some of these large (for my small herd of 20 cattle) paddocks into two or three to concentrate the grazing, but the issue that I have is access to water. Each of the three large paddocks above has a drinking trough (one purpose built from concrete, and the other two are rusting old baths with float valves added). I have tried creating 'corridors' to the water (see attached illustration), but it is very difficult to run the wire around corners like that, and is very time consuming.
So I had a thought, which was to build a water tender (trailer), with drinking troughs fitted to the side, that I could tow behind the tractor as I shift the cattle. I thought that such a thing could even be self powered, by fitting a
winch from a pickup truck, a car battery, and an appropriate solar panel. I could keep the concrete trough, which is in good repair, but remove the two bath tubs and just leave a riser with a tap to fill the tender (suitably protected from cattle, of course, since they love nothing more than to scratch themselves on something that has nice sharp edges like a tap.
One final question, noting the herd size and paddock width above, what is the minimum paddock "depth" in order to avoid the containment stress that Paul spoke about in his "raising cattle without hay" podcast. 50' would seem to be reasonable to me, but that is not particularly great density on a 400' wide strip. Another thought I had was to run a new permanent fence down the middle to create two parallel 200 x 1800 paddocks, which would allow double the density with the same 'fence easement' for the cattle.
Appreciate any advice or experience on this one.