Thank you sir , just the information I was looking for! I I am going to build a offset perimeter fence . I have cows now and will have sheep , I also need to keep my dogs inside.
I’m in the same situation. We have existing 4 strand barbed wire perimeter fence for historic cattle grazing, but want to graze sheep and keep dogs in. Thinking of posts at every dip and rise or every 20-50ft for flats with 6in, 12in, and 24in wire spacing. Any recommendations?
@@AZHighlandHomestead hey ! I ended up utilizing the existing perimeter woven wire fence and adding a strand of high tensile wire at the top and used “lockjaw’s” insulators . The property had a barbed wire fence dividing the middle so I just removed all the Barbwire and replaced with high tensile , this also sends power to the back of the property and kept me from having to have hot wire Around the “yard” portion
@@Plastic-innovation wow thanks. I have 300 acres in SE Minnesota It’s all contours and I want to stop renting it out and graze the whole thing eventually! Just like Greg Judy
@@bigwhane8603 Check out his week's video. Hopefully, this answers your questions. If not, give us a call and Mike can talk more with you on this. ruclips.net/video/5lbw6SrjeZ4/видео.html
What would you suggest to fence deer out of an Orchard and Market Garden area? That would not catch fawns or yearlings in the fence. Also to keep goats out.
Using a tall fence of 6ft. with multiple wires, tightly spaced would be a good option. You may also want to consider a 3D deer fence which has proven successful as well. Please contact us if you would like to discuss this in more detail at 800-788-4709 or email at team@plastic-innovation.com.
I really like my Timeless fence post.
Good tips on post placement
Good information thank you for sharing this listening from Bangs Texas
5m😊l🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
j vi pi
5m😊l🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
j vi pi
Thank you sir , just the information I was looking for! I I am going to build a offset perimeter fence . I have cows now and will have sheep , I also need to keep my dogs inside.
I’m in the same situation. We have existing 4 strand barbed wire perimeter fence for historic cattle grazing, but want to graze sheep and keep dogs in. Thinking of posts at every dip and rise or every 20-50ft for flats with 6in, 12in, and 24in wire spacing. Any recommendations?
@@AZHighlandHomestead hey ! I ended up utilizing the existing perimeter woven wire fence and adding a strand of high tensile wire at the top and used “lockjaw’s” insulators . The property had a barbed wire fence dividing the middle so I just removed all the Barbwire and replaced with high tensile , this also sends power to the back of the property and kept me from having to have hot wire Around the “yard” portion
I have seen some folks add an additional wire angled down to/from a post into a dip.
Can you do a video on countours. What posts to use
We will absolutely work on a video for that! You should see it next week. Thanks for asking.
@@Plastic-innovation wow thanks.
I have 300 acres in SE Minnesota
It’s all contours and I want to stop renting it out and graze the whole thing eventually! Just like Greg Judy
@@bigwhane8603 Check out his week's video. Hopefully, this answers your questions. If not, give us a call and Mike can talk more with you on this.
ruclips.net/video/5lbw6SrjeZ4/видео.html
What would you suggest to fence deer out of an Orchard and Market Garden area? That would not catch fawns or yearlings in the fence. Also to keep goats out.
Using a tall fence of 6ft. with multiple wires, tightly spaced would be a good option. You may also want to consider a 3D deer fence which has proven successful as well. Please contact us if you would like to discuss this in more detail at 800-788-4709 or email at team@plastic-innovation.com.