Virtual fences could make managing grazing livestock on farms more flexible and more efficient while improving animal welfare ...
Research shows cattle respect both electric and invisible boundaries, creating new opportunities for grazing management.
More than 100 cattle producers travelled to Champion Station near Blackall last week to inspect one of Australia's largest ...
Dustin Taylor left the gate open when he kicked hundreds of cows into one of his pastures this fall. That particular gate had been a source of endless frustration. It’s in the middle of an elk ...
A high-tech, no-fence solution is teaching cattle to stay home on the range, University of Alberta research has found. That's a big step forward for potentially helping cattle ranchers graze their ...
The Gazette offers audio versions of articles using Instaread. Some words may be mispronounced. Cattle at a nature preserve in Eastern Iowa appear to roam the land freely — no fences or cowboys on ...
New technology called virtual fencing is catching on in Idaho and the West. It works like an invisible fence for pets, but at a much larger scale for livestock management. Carmen ranchers Chyenne and ...
Last spring, Alan Williams received a federal grant to replace some fencing on his cattle ranch in southern Idaho. His outfit is based in Delta, Utah, but he and his brother, Jared, who are fourth ...
RENO, Nev. (News 4 & Fox 11) — The future of grazing management is here. Virtual cattle fencing, where farmers draw GPS boundaries to herd cattle, has the potential to upend the way ranchers have ...
To manage livestock and keep them in the proper areas or pastures or to graze a pasture rotationally, traditional fencing with wood, wire or steel, or even portable electric fencing, is one solution.
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