with pasture divided into paddocks, each grazed in turn for a short period paddock with
Lake Rotorua in the background In
Australian and
New Zealand English, any agricultural field may be called a
paddock, especially if for keeping sheep or cattle. If stock are grazed there, the space may be called a
run, e.g.
sheep run;
cattle run. The term paddock is used more specifically in
animal husbandry for a system in which grazing land is divided into small areas, paddocks, and the stock graze each paddock in turn for a short period. Paddock grazing systems may be designed with, for example, 6 or 11 paddocks used in rotation. A paddock is normally fenced, usually by wire, and often defined by its natural boundaries, or is otherwise considered distinct. A
back paddock is a smaller field that is situated away from the farm house; possibly land of lesser quality. The equivalent concept in North America and the UK is a
pasture. In Australia, the word seems to have had its current meaning since at least 1807 and in New Zealand since at least 1842. However, the English meaning of "field" was used earlier in Australia and is still occasionally used. Similarly,
meadow was in early use and has appeared later, for example, in 2004. Field remains in regular use in Australasia in expressions such as
football field,
Field Day and
field trip. In a new style of
intensive farming developed in North America, a paddock is a small (perhaps 1 acre) temporary subdivision of a pasture made with electric fencing, which is intensely grazed for a day and then left to rest for perhaps 80 days or more. ==Gallery==