nanog mailing list archives

RE: Internet mauled by bears


From: "Chuck Church" <chuckchurch () gmail com>
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 2011 11:55:04 -0400

Can we take this offline?  I don't believe livestock behavior patterns have
much operational content.


Thanks,

Chuck

-----Original Message-----
From: Jason Baugher [mailto:jason () thebaughers com] 
Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2011 11:31 AM
To: nanog () nanog org
Subject: Re: Internet mauled by bears

On 9/22/2011 9:58 AM, JC Dill wrote:
On 20/09/11 7:15 AM, Jason Baugher wrote:

Horses are okay, but you have to tie things to the wire so they can 
see it. They're too dumb to remember where it is, apparently.

This has nothing to do with the horse's ability to see or remember 
where the fence it.  It has to do with the value (both financial and 
emotional) the owner places on the animal, and the ensuing costs if it 
breaks the fence.  Horses can get hurt quite easily, vet bills can run 
into hundreds or thousands of dollars quite quickly.  Most horse 
owners will spend far more than the replacement cost of the animal in 
vet bills and husbandry to heal it when it gets injured, because the 
animal has a "member of the household" status in their lives and can't 
easily be replaced by a similar animal.  So they flag wire fences to 
help the horse avoid getting hurt.  Then there's liability.  In many 
states, if a horse gets out on the road and gets hit, the horse owner 
is liable for the damages to the car and occupants.  If someone in the 
car is injured or killed (likely if the horse is hit head-on and comes 
thru the windshield) the liability costs can be significant, run into 
millions of dollars.  For this reason, many equestrian insurance 
policies require that electric fencing be flagged.

Other livestock aren't as likely to cause fatal injuries to car 
occupants if they are hit, because the animal's body is lower to the 
road, less likely to come over the hood.

jc



That's interesting to know. It's also interesting to note that other 
animals, with the possible exception of sheep, will not run through an 
electric fence once they know that it is there. Sheep do it intentionally.



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