2001 - Volume #25, Issue #6, Page #06
[ Sample Stories From This Issue | List of All Stories In This Issue | Print this story
| Read this issue]
Portable Windbreak Protects Cattle On Pasture
Thompson uses oilfield pipe and lumber to make the windbreaks. Boards bolt vertically to the frame. An open space at the top of the windbreak allows you to grab it with a front-end loader or forklift.
Thompson found that a portable windbreak fence was the perfect solution for sheltering cattle on some rented range land during the winter. The cattle had been sheltered in aspen groves but browsed so much that the aspen trees were dying out. He tried using flax straw bales for windbreaks, but the cows ate them as well.
"They had to be extremely mobile. I move them every week. I can use my front-end loader to pick them up, and because they're 20 percent open they don't blow over. Moving them helps spread the manure out," he says.
Thompson and his brother Ian and nephew Brock are now making portable windbreaks in their welding shop.
Detailed plans for constructing the shelters are available by contacting FARM SHOW Followup, Lorne Klein, Saskatchewan Ag and Food, Box 2003, 110 Souris Ave., Weyburn, Sask., Canada S4H 2Z9 (ph 306 848-2382 or 306 848-2374).
Click here to download page story appeared in.
Click here to read entire issue
To read the rest of this story, download this issue below or click here to register with your account number.