"The person above me has tons of wasted space with alleys, and wasted dollars with double the fence.. I wouldn't do that, waste, IMO"
Sorry. I would disagree. Not wasted space . Common fencelines are not a good idea with horses, so do not consider it wasted $$$. Having a horse have to be put down because of improper fencing would be wasted $$$ in my opinion and irresponsible. All of our alley ways probably add up to about 1 1/2 - 2 acres - so that is one less head I can have on my land. Not that big of a deal. And they can be used for bridal paths.
I have worked and been in the horse industry for 30+ years and seen many injuries on other farms due to common fencelines between feild. It is always better to be safe than sorry.
I grew up on a cattle farm 50 head on about 200 acres of pasture and if the fence was not properly maintained they would be out in a heartbeat - that was with great grass - alfalfa/orchard/timothy, plenty of water and twice a day feed of grain. So do not skimp on fencing. Luckily a properly maintaind electric fence works wonders with most animals. Our fence cost us about $40/330 feet, so multiply that by 4 for 4 strand fence. We have used the same fence for 12 + years and moved it around three different properties. It is difficult to do that with electric wire and impossible with wood, which is one of the reasons we go with the electric braided fence. Plus it is white, looks nice and is visible. Also wouldn't recommend electric tape because it stretches in the wind.
Sorry. I would disagree. Not wasted space . Common fencelines are not a good idea with horses, so do not consider it wasted $$$. Having a horse have to be put down because of improper fencing would be wasted $$$ in my opinion and irresponsible. All of our alley ways probably add up to about 1 1/2 - 2 acres - so that is one less head I can have on my land. Not that big of a deal. And they can be used for bridal paths.
I have worked and been in the horse industry for 30+ years and seen many injuries on other farms due to common fencelines between feild. It is always better to be safe than sorry.
I grew up on a cattle farm 50 head on about 200 acres of pasture and if the fence was not properly maintained they would be out in a heartbeat - that was with great grass - alfalfa/orchard/timothy, plenty of water and twice a day feed of grain. So do not skimp on fencing. Luckily a properly maintaind electric fence works wonders with most animals. Our fence cost us about $40/330 feet, so multiply that by 4 for 4 strand fence. We have used the same fence for 12 + years and moved it around three different properties. It is difficult to do that with electric wire and impossible with wood, which is one of the reasons we go with the electric braided fence. Plus it is white, looks nice and is visible. Also wouldn't recommend electric tape because it stretches in the wind.