LMK17
Loving the herd life
First time we’ve had this problem, although I know it‘s a common one.
A big bull just showed up on our neighbor’s place. Usually he borrows a bull from down the street to breed his cows, so I’m hoping the problem is temporary. I have 1 dairy cow & 2 beef heifers, all open. The bull is obsessed with them. Nevermind that our neighbor has far more cows than we do; I guess the bull figures his job there is done. We have good fences. The fenceline we share with this neighbor is 42” woven wire topped with 2 strands of barbed wire (total height about 4.5’) and lined with hotwire at 12” & 42”. I figure it’s just a matter of time before the bull tries to come crashing over or through the fence. Already, I’ve seen him bending down the barbed strands to get his head over, and yesterday I found a place where the top hot strand is creased pretty badly. I’m guessing that was either his nose or maybe a hoof? Last night, I moved my girls from the back pasture to the front pasture in case the neighbor had the bull penned in the back half of his place, but this morning I saw the bull up front rubbing on the fence. Apparently he has run of the entire property next door, so unlesss I let my girls into my backyard, there’s no way of keeping them from sharing a fenceline. I’ve moved them a few times, and the bull just paces the fenceline until he finds the right gates to get him across that property and just over the fence from my cows.
I’m super annoyed at the thought of having to repair our fence after the bull flattens it. Plus I really don’t want my girls bred right now. I plan to breed them in April or May for a spring calving next year. And darn it, I want to choose the bull; not just settle for whatever beast shows up in my pasture looking for some fun. I’m afraid he’s too big for my heifers, too.
I’m going to take this opportunity to beef up our fences a bit more, although it’s going to be at least a few days before I can get to that. I think I’ll add an extra hot strand at the top of the fence. Maybe if that’s the first thing an animal encounters with his nose instead of a barbed strand, that’ll be a nice deterent. I just hope the bull doesn’t come through before I get a chance to do that. I’m going to use something like this to top off the fenceline built with t-posts. Some of the runs have wooden posts, though. Does anyone know of a similar post-top insulator that I can use with wood? I haven’t been able to find one.
Also, who else has dealt with a problem bull from a neighbor’s place? Any advice?
A big bull just showed up on our neighbor’s place. Usually he borrows a bull from down the street to breed his cows, so I’m hoping the problem is temporary. I have 1 dairy cow & 2 beef heifers, all open. The bull is obsessed with them. Nevermind that our neighbor has far more cows than we do; I guess the bull figures his job there is done. We have good fences. The fenceline we share with this neighbor is 42” woven wire topped with 2 strands of barbed wire (total height about 4.5’) and lined with hotwire at 12” & 42”. I figure it’s just a matter of time before the bull tries to come crashing over or through the fence. Already, I’ve seen him bending down the barbed strands to get his head over, and yesterday I found a place where the top hot strand is creased pretty badly. I’m guessing that was either his nose or maybe a hoof? Last night, I moved my girls from the back pasture to the front pasture in case the neighbor had the bull penned in the back half of his place, but this morning I saw the bull up front rubbing on the fence. Apparently he has run of the entire property next door, so unlesss I let my girls into my backyard, there’s no way of keeping them from sharing a fenceline. I’ve moved them a few times, and the bull just paces the fenceline until he finds the right gates to get him across that property and just over the fence from my cows.
I’m super annoyed at the thought of having to repair our fence after the bull flattens it. Plus I really don’t want my girls bred right now. I plan to breed them in April or May for a spring calving next year. And darn it, I want to choose the bull; not just settle for whatever beast shows up in my pasture looking for some fun. I’m afraid he’s too big for my heifers, too.
I’m going to take this opportunity to beef up our fences a bit more, although it’s going to be at least a few days before I can get to that. I think I’ll add an extra hot strand at the top of the fence. Maybe if that’s the first thing an animal encounters with his nose instead of a barbed strand, that’ll be a nice deterent. I just hope the bull doesn’t come through before I get a chance to do that. I’m going to use something like this to top off the fenceline built with t-posts. Some of the runs have wooden posts, though. Does anyone know of a similar post-top insulator that I can use with wood? I haven’t been able to find one.
Also, who else has dealt with a problem bull from a neighbor’s place? Any advice?
Last edited: