Freemotion: regarding your personal size hay feeder

freemotion

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Cool! I wouldn't make that type of bag for a goat, they would get entangled in it with their pointy little feet....but I followed the links and you can buy the netting by the foot for a reasonable price and one could make wall feeders or hay bags with a small piece of the netting in place of the wire fencing or in place of making a welted opening in a hay bag, which is not a beginner sewing technique.
 

PJisaMom

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n.smithurmond said:
Roll farms said:
We used goat panels (4" openings) and have had good luck w/ those.

I buy the bent ones at 1/2 price, since we're going to cut them up anyway, who cares if they're not perfect.
We're using panels too, but uncut because we don't presently have a tool that works well enough to cut them. What are you cutting them with?
Angle grinder. :D
 

Our7Wonders

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I must tell you, despite the small openings, my feeder seems to be working VERY well! They manage to pull the hay out - more slowly than they would otherwise, but they get it all done regardless.

What's rather cool is I have almost NO WASTE! I only have a week of feeding them to compare it too, but I was feeding them 5 slices of hay throughout the day, wondering if I shouldn't give more - I think they would have easily taken another slice or two if given the chance. More than half would be on the ground. Now I'm going through only 3 slices and there is a tiny bit left over in the morning that they finish off along with their breakfast slice by noon.

4x4 would likely be too big, I think we'd start seeing more waste again. I think a 3x4 opening would be perfect instead of 2x4, though watching them eat now does remind me of how they would likely forage naturally. They have to work a bit at it and they rip small mouthfulls of hay out of the feeder then munch it all up and rip more out. They seem more content now than when it all wound up on the ground - feeding less and they're getting more out of it - makes me a happy goat feeder!

Thanks freemotion!! I'll take a picture and try to post it in the near future, I appreciate you posting your examples!

Debbi
 

Beekissed

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n.smithurmond said:
Roll farms said:
We used goat panels (4" openings) and have had good luck w/ those.

I buy the bent ones at 1/2 price, since we're going to cut them up anyway, who cares if they're not perfect.
We're using panels too, but uncut because we don't presently have a tool that works well enough to cut them. What are you cutting them with?
I cut mine with a sawzaw with the metal cutting blade....very quick and easy. Here's a pic of my self feeding station using the panels. Unlike Free's naughty goats, my sheep are really utilizing this well and I have had very little waste. Actually less than I had anticipated and so I had to actually place hay on the ground as bedding....I had kind of hoped they would waste just enough to supply nice soft bedding places for themselves! :p

At the beginning:

82_sheep_shelter_puppies_sheep_017.jpg


After half a month of use:

82_sheep_shelter_puppies_sheep_046.jpg
 

jlbpooh

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I made a feeder that holds about 5-6 flakes of hay. It is gravity fed and kind of a v-shape attached to the wall. The mesh for them to eat out of is a chain-link fence scrap that is stapled onto the frame. It works great with minimal waste and they can eat it empty all the way to the bottom with no problems. I can get pics this weekend if someone wants to see it. (It's dark morning and night when I get to take care of my animals right now, so pics are out during the week.)

|\
| \
| \ OSB
| \
| \
| \
-----------
| /
| /
| / Chainlink
| /
| /
| /
------

OK, I am no artist on here and its not to scale, but there is a wooden frame. The bottom half is covered in chainlink and the top is a solid piece of OSB (otherwise I had a crazy goat using it as a bed. The back is against the wall as is one end. The exposed end has a triangular shaped door that swings open to allows it to be filled with hay. 4 goats eat out of it at the same time with no problems. On my goat's playhouse, I have considered putting chainlink across a portion of the wall and putting the hay in between the studs to be a smaller scale feeder. I haven't gotten it done yet though. This one seems to be plenty of capacity for the 4 of them since it gets filled daily. More goats in the future ever, may mean feed space expansion later on, LOL. If we go away, we always have someone that comes twice a day at a minimum, so I don't have to worry about needing a larger quantity available.
 

freemotion

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I want pics!!! That drawing looks similar to the design I had in mind when I made the bungee/sled/cookie sheet version. I would love to see what you made!
 
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