The sentence does not need to be revised.
Probably cause the grass on the other side of the fence is tastier than the grass that's in the pasture. Cows will reach through the fence if the grass in the pasture is down, or they don't want to eat a particular species of grass that is in the pasture.
A gate opens and closes, like a door. A fence partitions off pasture, crops, etc. and is not meant to be moved.
A fence is a fence no matter what it's holding inside, there's no specific or special name that is used for a fence that keeps cattle in. It can be made of barbed wire, wooden boards, iron paneling, high-tensile wire, electric wire, or page wire.
I could not escape the music. The frantic goat made his wild escape through a hole in the pasture's fence.
No. Despite the thorns, roses are actually quite edible and if a horse can figure out how to eat your roses, they will. It's best to keep the roses away from the pasture fence line, far enough that horses can't reach through and nibble on them.
60 acres is 9013 ft. in square pasture
9013 ft. square pasture
You want a solid wooden fence. This is the best material to avoid injury, and it is also the best fence to keep them in the walls of the farm, and avoid a possible escape.
Several, high
Pasture development is typically a lengthy process that involves either improving the quality of the pasture, or creating a pasture for livestock by seeding perennial forages and building a fence-line. The former tends to be a longer process than the latter, depending on how poor shape the pasture is in when the development process begins.
My first choices would be wood poles and no-climb wire at least 5 ft. in height. Also, pipe corral with no-climb wire, wire always on the inside of the pipe corral. There are some very good fencing on the market now such as high tensil with 3 or 4 strands, but a foal may put his head through and then panic and hurt himself and ruin the fence.
There are millions of these bugs in my pasture. Only our pasture...not the neighbors. It's like the fence is their border! I have seen them in balls on the ground. 5-10 balled together around a leaf or piece of wood.