thumb|Track and field hurdles thumb|A traditional wattle hurdle thumb|A horse free-jumping a steeplechase-type hurdle right|175px|thumb|A mobile cattle pen made using steel hurdles; attached to a cattle crush in foreground thumb|Hurdles being used to cross the Mississippi River. thumb|Ancient site of the "ford of hurdles", Dublin A hurdle (UK English, limited US English) is a moveable section of light fence. In the United States, terms such as "panel", "pipe panel" or simply "fence section" are used to describe moveable sections of fencing intended for agricultural use and crowd control; "hurd
thumb|Track and field hurdles thumb|A traditional wattle hurdle thumb|A horse free-jumping a steeplechase-type hurdle right|175px|thumb|A mobile cattle pen made using steel hurdles; attached to a cattle crush in foreground thumb|Hurdles being used to cross the Mississippi River. thumb|Ancient site of the "ford of hurdles", Dublin A hurdle (UK English, limited US English) is a moveable section of light fence. In the United States, terms such as "panel", "pipe panel" or simply "fence section" are used to describe moveable sections of fencing intended for agricultural use and crowd control; "hurdle" refers primarily to fences used as jumping obstacles for steeplechasing with horses or human track and field competition.
Traditional hurdles were made from wattle, but modern designs for fencing are now frequently made of metal. They are used for handling livestock, as decorative fencing, for steeplechasing and in the track and field event of hurdling and shuttle hurdle relay.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).