| ▲ | defrost 3 hours ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
I'm also rural. Livestock theft, agricultural gear theft, is a real thing in AU/NZ as I suspect it is where you work. One advantage (but is it economic?) to GPS collars on animals is tracking and warnings should they all suddenly accelerate to road transport speeds. There's potential for heartbeat monitoring to warn of fallen / removed collars or predator takedowns. > this is a job we do once a year. And these collars are principally targeted to dairy operations that move herds about on a daily basis. > I'm in the american west. And BLM land that is used for grazing is fenced. I'm from the Kimberley .. what's a fence? | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | cogman10 2 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
> Livestock theft, agricultural gear theft, is a real thing in AU/NZ as I suspect it is where you work. I mean, I don't want to jinx it, but it's not really been an issue for us. The main theft we've had to deal with is feed theft and that was solved by switching from 50lbs bales to 1 ton bales. > And these collars are principally targeted to dairy operations that move herds about on a daily basis. Yeah, makes sense why it'd doesn't make sense to us. We didn't raise dairy cattle. We did have a couple of dairy cows, but that was more for my family and a few members of the community. Not for any sort of actual real production. I could see how it'd be a time saver in that case as you do have to twice daily gather the cows to get milked. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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