Tag: Electric Fencing

Snow Ball and Her Kids on Electric Fence

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Snowball with Patrick and Patsy

It’s been a good five days, our beautiful Goat, Snowball, and her kids Patrick and Patsy, have been in this little pasture beside our house. They’ve done very well cleaning this ar3a, pruning back our seven sisters roses, weeds, and other things. 

Before and After pruning with Goats

More importantly they’ve all managed to stay in the pasture, and now the kids are trained to electric fence and have had no traumatic experiences and have not escaped. Excellent News! 

Do You have overgrown areas, pasture or woodland that you’d like trimmed, pruned, regenerated? Or Grass Pastures that need natural fertilizer? Call Brian at #BridenFarm 902-907-0770 

Heres a Video showing the place after five days …

Moving Our Berkshire Pigs To Electric Wire Fencing

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Berkshire Pigs on Woodland Pasture

We brought Larry, Curly and Moe, our Berkshire Pigs home to Briden Farm on March 27, 2022, when they were just ten weeks old. They’re now about 17 weeks old.

We’ve actually had them on Woodland Pasture since their arrival. Introducing them to Electric Wire Fencing a couple weeks ago. It’s first time using Electric Wire Fencing for pigs, and I really wondered! t’s hard to believe you can string a couple, or three strands of wire, hook it to a fence charger, and have those pigs stay in their pasture! It’s incredible to see…

I could watch them All day! They’re incredible to watch! Seeing how they interact, how the work, and how they recognize things like the white fence posts and electric wires. You can literally see that they recognize it! 

If you’ve never sat and watched Pigs work! We invite You to come spend sometime at Briden Farm. Call Now to Book A Time to Visit. Call Brian at (902) 907-0770 

Training Pigs to Electric Fence for The First Time

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Berkshire Pigs

Training Pigs to Electric Fence for the first time! Theirs and Ours! Last Year was the first time we raised Pigs, and we did it inside the rotational pastures we had fenced with Mink Cages. I try to move our goats through an area and then follow with the Pigs. However, Last year we encountered a few challenges… like having to move not only the Goats and Pigs, but also having to move the cages.  Moving the cages every two weeks not only takes a lot of work, it also takes a lot of time. Not to mention the hazard of slipping and falling on our hillsides, or twisting and damaging our backs, etc. The cages work well, but if I can train the pigs to electric fence it will make things much easier! Plus give us some of our time back! 

Our Goats do very well in Electric Netting, and as long as we rotate them often enough, every two weeks will work great, and that’s how often pigs should be moved. So, indications are the pigs should do well in the electric wire, so that will lighten our load, allow us to cover more ground, easier, and have even happier Goats, Pigs, and maybe Farmers too! T


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