May residents draw from a pit of straw (or similar dry goods, not water) that straddles two Shabbos limits?
Synopsis
A pit of straw between two towns' Shabbos limits may be used by both — each feeds their animals from their own side — without concern of taking from the other's portion.
More in Sifting Flour on Yom Tov
When a trench of collected (still) water spans the Shabbos limits of two towns, may residents of each town draw water from within their own techum?
5 opinions
What type of partition is required to permit drawing from a shared trench, and does it need to touch the floor of the trench?
5 opinions
Does the prohibition apply when the trench spans two towns but is entirely located within the shared middle zone (not at the end of either techum)?
1 opinions
Does the prohibition of drawing from a shared trench apply on Shabbat, Yom Tov, or both?
1 opinions
Does the prohibition apply when only one town (not two) borders the trench, with the far portion of the trench extending beyond that town's techum?
2 opinions
Does flowing (moving) water in a trench spanning two towns' limits require a partition or any correction?
4 opinions
Does the partition requirement between two towns apply even when one of the towns belongs to non-Jews?
1 opinions
Related from other topics
Does a person living in a straw house, woodshed, cattle barn, or storehouse restrict the other courtyard residents?
Eruv Requirements for Courtyards
If a stack of straw ten handbreadths high stands between two courtyards, must each courtyard make its own eruv? And may residents remove straw from it on Shabbat?
Eruv Materials and Collection
Discussion
Discussion coming soon.
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