the basic configuration that I have seen at many locations is a 10-12 foot wide corridor with a series of gates forming small pens so that you can move and sort - a small pen or two off to the side lets you segregate temporarily
when I was raising goats I had a corridor between the doe and buck paddocks - at breeding time I opened the gate on the doe end - any doe that walked the 150 feet to stand at the buck gate to flag was ready to breed - I shut the doe gate and then selected the buck I wanted for breeding - put him in the corridor with the doe - I always knew when a doe was bred and to who (except in the case of one buck who learned to breed THROUGH the fence - but he was my prize buck so I was not too disappointed!) -- questions? Ron and Corgi co-pilots Tina and Jeremy (AKC) operating from a base near Austin TX private email at rkee...@realtime.net web site at http://TravelWithRonK.com group at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TravelWithRonK TravelWithRonK is dedicated to coast to coast transport of small quantities of small livestock with more than 2500 animals transported in 8 years of service _______________________________________________ This message is from the Blackbelly mailing list Visit the list's homepage at %http://www.blackbellysheep.info