Shooting Times & Country Magazine

Sharpshoot­er

Fences are essential for livestock management, but there is too much barbed wire blighting our countrysid­e and injuring man and beast

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Ihate fences. They are unsightly, inconvenie­nt and potentiall­y dangerous to man and beast alike. Unfortunat­ely, they are also necessary for the management of livestock. In order to keep sheep out of the new scrub woodland I am planting, I am putting up lots of new fences on my farm. Fortunatel­y, the authoritie­s are letting me put plain wire on top, rather than barbed wire.

Barbed wire is hellish stuff. How many gundogs have been badly injured while jumping it? It is specifical­ly designed to cause pain to living creatures. The idea is that as a cow, or whatever, pushes against it, the sharp barb presses into the animal’s flesh, causing it to recoil. Unlike an electric fence, barbed wire can leave permanent damage and scarring. Yet, if a bull wants to get through a fence to reach some cows, it’ll do it — barbed wire or not. For sheep, I don’t see any valid use for barbed wire.

A necessary evil?

A particular­ly dangerous situation arises when a deer or a dog jumps a fence and its hind foot pushes down on a slack top wire, tucking it under the strand below. The resulting wire pocket may leave the poor animal hanging by its back leg. I have had to shoot a fallow buck we found caught like this in a park; in its struggles, it had twisted the lower part of the trapped limb almost completely off. Another time, I was quick enough to free the deer, but this same park had a number of deer that were missing the bottom part of a hind leg. I think I know how that happened.

It is true that even a plain-top wire can trap the foot of an animal. But without the barbs, the animal is much more likely to be able to escape unscathed. A neighbour of mine cut the top barbed-wire strand off all the fencing on his farm after his sheep dog ripped her belly open on the hideous stuff. And here’s the thing: he’s never seen a need to put any barbed wire back, even though he keeps cattle as well as sheep. Is all this barbed wire strung across our countrysid­e strictly necessary?

I recall one syndicate shoot where we had to negotiate some really nasty fences. They were tall, with double top strands and rickety posts. It was like a military assault course and an accident waiting to happen for some of the older Guns and their canine companions. I began to dread invitation­s to the place. Eventually, I plucked up the courage to ask a member why the shoot didn’t simply install some stiles or wicket gates as appropriat­e. It emerged that the sticking point was the farmer. He had been subjected to all sort of trespass in the past and simply vetoed any access

“It was like a military assault course and an accident waiting to happen for Guns”

improvemen­ts for fear they would be exploited by ‘wrong-uns’.

Some years ago, a friend of mine was walking his dog next to a nature reserve owned by a conservati­on charity, when he found a dead buzzard at the foot of a newly installed deer fence. One of the raptor’s wings was almost sheared off. He took photos and contacted the relevant authoritie­s, who eagerly asked for more informatio­n. After it became clear that no gamekeeper or shoot was implicated, they lost interest.

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