A
cattle grid or cattle guard –
also known as a vehicle pass, Texas
gate, or, in New
Zealand
, a cattle stop – is a type of
obstacle used to prevent livestock, such
as sheep or cattle, from
passing along a road which penetrates the fencing surrounding an
enclosed piece of land. It consists of a depression in the
road covered by a transverse grid of bars or tubes, normally made
of metal and firmly fixed to the ground on either side of the
depression, such that the gaps between them are wide enough for
animals' legs to fall through, but
sufficiently narrow not to impede a wheeled
vehicle. They rely for their effect (of barring
passage to animals but not to wheeled vehicles) upon animals'
reluctance to set foot upon them.
Cattle grids are usually installed over roads where they cross a
fenceline, often at a boundary between public
and private lands. They are an alternative to the erection of gates
that would need to be opened and closed every time a vehicle
passed, and are common where roads cross open
moorland,
rangeland or
common land maintained by grazing, but
where segregation of fields is impractical. Cattle grids are also
used when otherwise unfenced railways cross a fenceline. Cattle
grids are seen throughout the world and quite common in places such
as
Australia, the
Scottish Highlands, or the
National Parks of England
and Wales.
They are also common throughout the Western
United
States
and Canada
, where they
are usually called a cattle guard or, occasionally, a
Texas gate. In the USA, they are most often used on
BLM and
Forest Service land, but are
also used on paved roads and even exit ramps of the
Interstate Highway System in many
rural areas.

A cattle grid and straying sheep
While these barriers are usually effective, they can fail due to
ingenious animals. Sheep have been known to jump or run along the
side of grids as wide as , traversing them in order to find more
and better food or water. Wider grids are used where deer are to be
contained. Some animals, particularly wildlife, can jump across
them, and animals with particularly large feet, such as
American bison or even particularly large
bovine bulls, can walk across them without
slipping between the bars. Sometimes they may be connected to an
electric fence to prevent predatory animals, such as
dingoes and
foxes walking over
them. In areas with heavy snowfall and long periods without a thaw,
snow can fill up under a grid and allow animals to walk across
it.
Portable "Texas gates" suspend the gate by springs so that it
lowers to the ground when a vehicle passes over then returns to a
position above the ground.
Painted lines on the road can serve as
skeuomorphs of cattle grids. The light-dark
pattern of lines and pavement resembles a true cattle guard to
animals. Many animals see a more intense contrast between light and
dark because their night vision is much better than humans'.
Animals see the sharp contrast of the cattle guard on the ground as
a false visual cliff; they act as if the dark spots are deeper than
the light spots. Using a virtual cattle guard is cheaper than a
true cattle guard, and can be used on higher-speed roads due to its
smooth surface.
There is a British Standard for cattle grids: BS4008:2006. The US
standards are put forth by The American Association of State
Highway Transportation Officials (AASHTO). AASHTO provides load
rating guidelines for cattle guards that are used on public roads
in America. All cattle guards used on American public roads must be
certified by a qualified engineer that the guard meets AASHTO
guidelines.
See also
References
- Virtual cattle grids outsmart NT cattle -
28/07/2005
- How to
Buy and Install a Cattle Guard