New technology called “virtual fencing” is catching on in Idaho and the West. Virtual fencing works like an invisible fence for pets but at a much larger scale for livestock management.
For Kent Rochester, virtual fencing technology has made his job farming cattle a whole lot easier. The technology allows livestock to be moved or confined without the need for physical fences or ...
Pushed to the shove, farmers in Kangayam block who have been losing livestock to packs of wandering dogs are apparently trying out a new method of fencing to safeguard their flocks of goats and sheep.
Virtual fences could replace traditional fences, in some cases. Photo by Jared Prestwidge Legalising virtual stock fencing in NSW is a key recommendation of the state’s Committee on Investment, ...
Farmers in the Northern Territory, Queensland and Tasmania and Western Australia already have access to virtual fencing to confine, track and monitoring livestock. But NSW, along with South Australia.