EddieWalker
Epic Contributor
I've never had cattle, so I'm just guessing that she doesn't like being alone. From what I've been told, if they want out bad enough, they will go right through the fence. Usually it's to get food, but it sounds like yours has plenty of food, so the other reason must be it wants to be back with the herd.
As for your electric fence, how well did you ground it? If your soil is dry or rocky, getting a good ground is going to make it hard for the fence to work properly. The instruction I read for mine required three six foot ground rods to be used ten feet apart from each other. And that was for good soil. Then they went into how to improve ground for poor soil by adding more ground rods at the halfway point of the fence. You also have to be sure that your hot wire is 100 percent free of touching anything that can ground it out. Wet wood will ground out the wire. Insulators too close to a t post will cause problems. While it's a very simple concept, there are a lot of little things that can affect the amount of current that you get out of it.
Eddie
As for your electric fence, how well did you ground it? If your soil is dry or rocky, getting a good ground is going to make it hard for the fence to work properly. The instruction I read for mine required three six foot ground rods to be used ten feet apart from each other. And that was for good soil. Then they went into how to improve ground for poor soil by adding more ground rods at the halfway point of the fence. You also have to be sure that your hot wire is 100 percent free of touching anything that can ground it out. Wet wood will ground out the wire. Insulators too close to a t post will cause problems. While it's a very simple concept, there are a lot of little things that can affect the amount of current that you get out of it.
Eddie