Cattle creep
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/dd/Bonds_Cattle_Creep_158m_9.25ch_MLN_-_geograph.org.uk_-_1344921.jpg/250px-Bonds_Cattle_Creep_158m_9.25ch_MLN_-_geograph.org.uk_-_1344921.jpg)
A cattle creep is a small, field-to-field access for farm animals, usually to allow passage beneath an obstacle such as a road, canal, or railway embankment. Those under roads or railways may be termed underpasses.
As they are intended primarily for cattle or other livestock, cattle creeps usually have a low head height and are uncomfortable for humans to use.
On Dartmoor, in south-west England, the term sheep creep is used to describe a purposely constructed gap in the base of a drystone wall, commonly topped with a granite lintel. The gap allows sheep to pass from field to field, but is deliberately too small for cattle or ponies.[1] Similarly in Cornwall small gaps are constructed in Cornish hedges to allow sheep to pass through to graze the cliff-tops. In order to prevent sheep passing through the gap is covered using a large slab of slate.
See also
- Wildlife crossing
- Accommodation bridge
References
- ^ "Sheep | Legendary Dartmoor". Mar 24, 2016.
External links
Media related to Cattle creeps at Wikimedia Commons
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