IN this instance time should play the biggest role , because if you are controlling the job yourself then you probably aren ’ t paying yourself anyway . So if you spend extra time getting it right it probably doesn ’ t cost you anything . Yet the benefits can be far reaching .
Simple mistakes are made , especially late in the year :
“ We are desperate to get some cows undercover ”.
“ I need the cheapest option to get some cattle off the land ”.
“ We have a gap here close to the house , it ’ s wasted space , we might as well use it for now , and we ’ ll use it as a garage / workshop later ”. Yet mostly once cattle go into a building it is very difficult to turn the building back to anything other than cattle housing .
Did you stop and think is it in the right place to get rid of all the muck ?
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Does the ground slope away from or to the house ?
Water runs downhill naturally , so does dirty water and muck .
With this adage in mind and a bit of thought , a simple well designed farmyard will help to wash itself with every bit of rain . To put it simply if you can keep the farmhouse and yard at the top end and direct all the muck to the low end , cleaning will be a lot simpler and life a lot more pleasant with a lot less earache from the housekeeper .
Just because you wear wellington boots to walk through the cattle field and gateways doesn ’ t mean it ’ s alright to need them around the farmyard .
When you are designing your building make sure you know what you really want and and prepare IT for the real use .
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‘ the starting point for animal housinghas to be shelter and air exchange ’ |
£ 2,000.00 goes nowhere with vets bills , antibiotics and loss of growth rate or even lost / dead animals , all too often these factors are just put down to a fact of life , especially on a farm , just by buying / using the cheapest options at the beginning .
Very few open sided buildings work well for animal housing as far as ventilation and air exchange work , people say to me “ oh it will be alright with one side open ”.
After buying a smoke machine some 5 years ago and testing buildings I can assure you they don ’ t work . They may work reasonably well on a cold , wet , windy day when all of us are glad of shelter , but if you get a good spring day with the sun shining , with a bit of warmth in the building you will find there is probably no air movement at all , if there is any it is going out through the back side of the building .
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Animals need basic simple shelters .
• Shelter from the wind .
• Shelter from the rain .
• Shade from the sun .
• Plenty of fresh air movement above animal height .
Left alone in nature , animals will always find natural shelters , behind a wall , hedge , shelter belt , in a hollow , all with movement over the top of them so they always have fresh air to breathe in .
So the starting point for animal housing has to be shelter and air exchange .
Animals like having a wall to shelter behind but need plenty of air movement over the top of them .
All of us probably understand about trying to keep the prevailing wind and rain to the closed side of a building , yet we all fail to leave enough openings in the ridge to allow warm stale air to rise up
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