SageHill
Herd Master
I lucked out this year with Orthodox Easter and Cinco de Mayo on the same day. Took mine to auction on April 29.
Yes!! You have the adults & can always make more!am considering selling all of next year's lambs to pay for the fencing.
You will want to put is some shallow (~6") ditches tractor blade wide that parallel fence then turn to it in places of your choosing / established location. Those will keep entire fence line from washing out with wide surface flow flooding. Then smooth the spot under fence deeper and line with some 4-6" rock to prevent more erosion. You want H braces w with post set deep into concrete on either side. Then use high tensile wire to support chain link or cattle panel as the water gate that swings up in flood to cover gap under woven wire.Also DS1 called yesterday and said that we will have to put more posts in the ground along the rear fence line and set them deeper in concrete. When the flooding washed out the area in the back under the fence, it also washed out dirt along the fenceline and now the T's on the T-posts are showing above the ground! It never ends. Fence repairs on a fence that has not even been in the ground for a year! DS1 says he wants to get it done fast before we have a problem since the original T-posts are maintaining tension on the wire. I figure the water was able to wash out the dirt probably because we had all that rear line cleared of brush and shrubbery. Clearing the gully of brush on the higher end is why our fence washed out here in California last year.