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barbed wire host:www.agric.nsw.gov.au

Listing 1 - 4 from 4 for barbed wire

Animal Welfare Code of Practice No 3 - Horses in Riding Centres and Boarding Stables
... with post and rail fencing using timber or steel piping and steel or concrete posts. Barbed wire, prefabricated wire and high tensile fencing can injury horses severely, and should not be used for ...
www.agric.nsw.gov.au

Fact Sheet 16: Guidelines for minimum standards for keeping horses in urban areas
... wire should be avoided because of it its tendency to cause injury to horses. Post and rail and steel cattle cable fencing are suitable. Barbed wire, high tensile wire (2.8 + 2.5 mm) and prefabricated wire fencing should not be used. ... should be kept completely free of rubbish such as wire, tin, nails and plastic which may cause injury to ...
www.agric.nsw.gov.au

Caring for horses
... . The paddock should be: properly fenced (not with barbed wire) and with the fence easily seen by horses; free from all rubbish, especially old wire and iron; close enough to home to permit ...
www.agric.nsw.gov.au

Horse yards and handling facilities
... drafts. Fresh air is essential to general wellbeing and resistance to disease. Half-doors or wire mesh doors alone do not provide sufficient ventilation. Some form of window or air passage ... inside drainage. Drainage outside the stable must also be adequate. Paddock fences Any wire fences, whether barbed or plain wire, can cause severe injury to horses. Post-and-rail fences, or even cattle ...
www.agric.nsw.gov.au