You could be fined for fencing on government property. In the long run, it will cost less money to call a surveyor so you can establish where exactly the line is. It will also cost less effort, because the issue with fences and property lines is quite complicated.
For example, if there is an existing fence on your property that you want to replace, how do you know who owns it? There is no general rule governing ownership of the fence depending on the side. Your conveyance or transfer deed may express the boundaries you bear responsibility for in words. If it does not, then the deed might utilize the convention of applying a T-mark to the boundaries, for which the owner of the property bears responsibility.
An H-mark two T-marks mirrored on the boundary line is the symbol conventionally used if responsibility for the boundary is shared. Did you know groundhog burrows can reach up to 66 feet? Groundhog burrows can also cause problems in fields where there is no livestock. For example, an unseen burrow could damage the axle of a tractor driving over it, and an axle is inconvenient and expensive to repair.
Another risk lies in the fact that possums and groundhogs spread diseases, which could harm your livestock a great deal. The first step to ensuring safety is fencing around your pastures. Unwanted critters can also devour crops. If you have a garden, a wild animal like a rabbit could signify the end of it. Red Brand has a series of fence products that will help keep your garden safe. Tight, woven wires that are spaced out at about an inch will halt pests.
The horizontal wires for this type of fencing are spaced close together at the bottom of the fence, stopping unwanted elements from entering. With such tight spacing, only mice could enter the enclosure.
Trey Tennell is the Marketing Category Manager at Red Brand , a line of premium agricultural fencing products that is known as the most recognized brand of farm fence in the United States. Their website offers a wealth of additional information and tips to keep your animals safe. Selecting the Right Fence Usually, livestock producers use board, cable, barbed wire, mesh, woven wire, electric, high-tensile, or a combination of two or more of these fence types on their farms.
Proper Corner Post Installation A reliable fence starts with corner posts. Fence Staples are Important Your livestock is likely to cause the most wear on your fence. Related Posts.
Electric fencing can be the fastest and cheapest to build if you live in the country. It will handle any animal that is trained to the wire, and is also useful as a psychological barrier to even wildlife.
Wire that is electrified is said to be energized, or "hot. How to install an electric fence will not be covered here because some different techniques are involved with installation of this compared with building a standard permanent livestock fence.
However, please see How to Make an Electric Fence for more information. Barbed wire fencing with barbed wire installed alone in four to six or more-wired fences, smooth-wire fence in the form of high-tensile or low-tensile fencing this type of fencing is often electrified or a combination of smooth and barbed wire--one strand of barbed wire usually runs across top and sometimes at differing levels, or one strand of smooth wire runs across the top with the bottom wires barbed.
Both types are fencing are best for livestock Paige wire , though more expensive than barbed or smooth wire, is best for operations that pasture or raise goats, sheep, and pigs, and is a common pasture fencing for holding bison and elk. Paige wire may also be used on farms or ranches that run a cow-calf operation, and necessitates use if the producer doesn't want their calves out of the corral.
Paige wire is also called "farm fence" or "woven wire," and comes in the form of woven chicken wire or 12 to 14 gauge wire welded together to form squares of varying lengths apart, from four to six inches apart. It can stand as low as three feet or as tall as eight feet. Wooden horse railing or wooden boards are best for those who want more aesthetically pleasing farms and don't want to worry about the potential problems posed by wire fences.
It can be expensive but safe and effective for horses. Wooden board fencing is also suitable for holding cattle. Iron railing fencing is also suited for farms that have horses or wish to have aesthetically-pleasing yards. It can also be used for other livestock like cattle and sheep, especially in high-traffic areas such as holding corrals or sacrifice corrals.
Iron panel fencing comes in panels that need to be stabilized with wooden posts or stand-alone panels that simply require a tractor to put them into place. These, depending on the size, are great for keeping large animals such as deer, cattle especially bulls , horses including stallions , bison and even elk. Obtain a survey of your land. A legal land survey may be required to determine the exact perimeter of the land that you own, or where your land ends and your neighbor's begins.
You may need to arrange for this first since a wait may be involved. Note this is crucial for determining where your permanent fences are going to go especially if you have land that is not already surrounded by existing boundaries such as a road or a tree line.
It is less important if you are building internal fences within the base perimeter fence, because quite often you can survey out where these internal fences will go yourself rather than spend money to hire professional surveyors to do it for you.
Surveying out internal pasture and corral fences require quite a bit of measuring and making sure you have corners that are close to 90 degrees, and not at an obtuse or acute angle that your animals will find and get themselves cornered in. Use surveyor stakes also called "lath", surveyor tape, a ' tape measure, and chalk or marking paint, with the latter two items ideal for marking out small, "working" corrals and handling facilities.
You will need to use these items after you've completed the step after this next one. Phone the utility and gas company to mark out any underground utility and pipe lines that may be on your property.
Determine where your fences are going to go on paper. You will need a ruler, a protractor, a pencil, paper, and an eraser to create a drawing to help you figure out an efficient system of movement from pasture to pasture, pasture to corral, corral to pasture, and corral to handling area. Especially for pasture rotations, you must design a system that reduces or eliminates risk of returning to a pasture that has just been grazed and requires rest, and be organized so that you are going to have smooth flow of traffic from one pasture or corral to another.
The land survey done will help you out with your planning, especially if you can acquire a copy of a surveyor's map of your land.
Finding your land on Google Earth may help as well, especially to give you a better idea of how much land you need to cover and what the estimated measurements of your fence lines will be. You then can sketch out your pasture and corral spaces, noting the following: How many enclosures you want to have. For pastures, this all depends on the grazing system you want to have, and whether you want just a permanent perimeter fence so that you can have movable fencing for a rotational grazing system.
Where your gates should be. Remember, you need to have good flow. For most livestock, movement is smoother and it's easier to herd them if a gate is put in the corner of a pasture rather than in the middle of the fence line.
This is because most animals that can be herded as a group almost all species of livestock except pigs and chickens often always go to a corner rather than a fence. Where any "high-traffic" lanes may be optional. These are good if you need to divert animals away from a farmed field, a residence, or a protected natural area in moving them to another pasture. Lanes may be good if you have water facilities out on pasture as well as several pastures that are rotated throughout the year, and this one water source is sufficient for all moves.
Length of each fence-line , noting how much land area you have, and the perimeter of your land base via the surveying results. This will help you calculate out how much wire and how many posts will be needed. Length of gates and how many , for example if you need two 10 foot gates or only one 16 foot gate. Keep in mind space needed for potentially having equipment come into the pasture for various reasons, from reseeding pastures, mowing or haying excess forages, [8] X Research source to spreading manure, or even collecting a dead animal like a cow for disposal.
Plan out what kind of corner braces you want or need for your pasture fences. This is your anchor point for your fence that takes the brunt of the force generated by both lines of the fence that the corner brace is connected to, and is the first and most important thing you need to build for a pasture livestock fence.
You might want to search around your area for these corner braces when you go driving around. You will find all manner of corners out there for you to observe which have held up over the years to various degrees. Considering the value that a fence has, it makes sense to build your corner assemblies up to the highest standard in your area. In other words, when two H-braces back to back which are commonly seen on a pasture fence corner, three vertical posts, two horizontal braces, and bracing wire are used to construct such a corner brace.
This type of construction is standard and will hold up almost any fence for many years to come. Mark out all of your fence lines, corners, lanes, and gates. Using surveyor tape, lath, a long tape measure, chalk or bright paint, measure out where your fence-lines will go, where your corner braces will be, any lanes you will have, and where your gates will go. Mark out where you will need to sink posts in to first start forming corner braces. The chalk and paint are ideal for smaller areas like laying out a handling facility , and pointing where corner posts will need to go.
Lath with surveyor tape tied work the best as reference points to where corners will be, and where corner posts will need to be pounded in to.
Use all as best as possible so that when you come back with your supplies, you won't be confused as to where to begin or where your fence-line should actually be.
Purchase your fencing supplies. You will need quite a number of items: Fence posts treated wood, metal, or metal T-posts , both with the tapered ends and some that have no tapered ends for use as top bracing posts on corner braces; Barbed, smooth or paige wire or, boards or rails depending on what kind of fence you have settled on; For wire fences especially, all wire comes in rolls so you will need to build a contraption that allows the spool of wire to freely spin when you pull it along and unroll a strand of wire along the fence line, all without you having to hold the very heavy new spool most new spools of barbed wire weigh around 70 pounds Start with a metal or iron rod or pole that easily fits in the center of the spool, then go from there with any spare wood or metal parts you find that you can hammer or weld together.
Note, though, that iron or metal parts tend to be more durable than wood, even when a wooden spool holder is held together by screws. There are all sorts of inventions many producers have created that has worked for them, from truck-mounted holders to tractor-loader holders, all with the same purpose: Allow the spool to spin freely on its center axis so that it can be more easily unrolled.
Simply type in "barb wire spool holder" to your favorite search engine and be prepared to be inspired by the search results. A ratcheting come-along wire stretcher hand-held or operated from a vehicle, the latter ideal for wire fences longer than 20 feet 6. Most common small sizes are usually 1. Dig holes. The posts are buried in a hole that is as deep as is necessary in your area, depending on the type of soil you have. Corner brace posts need to be dug so that the base is sunk in at least 30 inches Install corner posts.
Some people choose to set them in concrete, however others argue that setting them in concrete will make them more prone to rot than if they were set in gravel, sand or the soil they are to be set in. Make sure they are straight and level it is never good to have crooked corner posts!
Fill in the space around the three posts with the soil that was dug out, gravel, sand, or concrete if you so choose. You should have a an approximate right degree angle formed between the post that is standing at the very center point of the corner of your fence and the other two on either side.
Connect the bracing, horizontal posts with the three posts. Use a tape measure, a pencil, and a chainsaw to mark and cut out the points where the posts are to meet and be very snug with each other. You may need to use a mallet to fully connect the top post with the sunken-in posts. For constructing H-corners with a bracing wire: Place the blunt-end post on top of the two standing posts, and mark the top portion that needs to be removed on the standing posts, and mark the portion at either end of the brace along the curved side, not the flat side that will also need to be removed.
Allow for 6 inches You should end up with a right-angle cut into the standing posts and the same at either end of the bracing post; the cuts facing each other directly on the standing posts, and one the same side of the bracing post. Do not remove more than what is marked, rather right on the mark or slightly less to allow for a more snug fit of the bracing post. Place the bracing post over the cuts and hammer in the ends, trying to do both at the same time, or rather not first working on getting one end all the way in before trying the other.
As mentioned, use a mallet if the braces are too tight to use with a hammer. Hammer in a couple nails into the end of the bracing post to keep it in place. Install the brace wire. The brace wire crosses from the top of one post down to the other, and tightening that wire with a stick by winding the wire up as tight as possible without breaking it further enhances the strength of the cross brace. Direction of where the brace wire is located is really important.
The wire should be looped around the top of the very middle corner brace, and sloped down to the post on the outside of the corner. Smooth galvanized wire is highly recommended, with four to five loops between each posts, then twisted. Direction of twist is up to you. Hammer in two or three staples over the wire on each of the standing posts to secure it.
Repeat with the other side of the corner. And, repeat this step with all other corners. Note that with board or rail fences, installing corner braces is not required. Even hot-wire temporary fences do not require permanent corner braces. Put up the first line of fencing wire. This is to act as a guide to where to sink the line posts in with the post-pounder. The first wire should be around 8 to 10 inches This step is usually not necessary for board or rail fences, nor temporary electric fences.
Put up line posts. Line posts or "fence posts" mentioned above must be set at regular intervals. This distance varies widely from fence to fence, and can range from as close as 6 feet 1. Closer is better if finances allow, and is a necessity if you are building holding or working corrals that will take a lot of abuse from the animals herded in them. All of the line posts you use that are would should be treated posts--no exceptions should be made, because untreated wood posts have a much shorter life-span than those that have been chemically pressure-treated.
These same posts should taper at the end which makes it easier for the post-pounder to drive them into the ground. Ideally line posts should be sunk in 14 to 18 inches More posts will be needed for more uneven terrain such as the edge of a hill or into a valley. Put up the rest of the wires. You will need to judge how many strands you want especially for wire fences. The standard is four wires per fence-line especially for barbed-wire fencing , but some producers prefer to install five or six-wire fences especially along roads.
Make sure each wire is evenly spaced with the other. This is also part of what makes a fence strong and sturdy.
If the wires are not evenly spaced it makes it easy for an animal to put its head through the fence or even be able to go right through or under the fence without any problems.
You must make it difficult for this to happen. For board to rail fences, the standard is three board or rails, one on top of the other and evenly spaced per fence line.
Hammer in the staples. Each line post will need to be connected to the wires strung up by staples. This is important because livestock will find a hole in the fence, and a hole can be a wire that is not connected to a post with a fence staple, or a wire that has been broken from too much pressure exerted on it.
The staple should be hammered in at an angle to the wire never perfectly perpendicular , and the loop slightly pointing up. It takes a lot of practice to get good at hammering staples in so they look nice and neat. They are not like hammering nails, because the two pointed ends allow for a lot more give than a single-spiked nail. Each blow to the staple must be right on ideally, blows happening so that the angle of the hammer head is next to perfectly perpendicular to the angle of the post so that it won't angle up too much into the wood, or bend so much that the staple gets so flat it needs to be replaced.
Also, when first attempting to hammer you may miss it so that the staple goes flying off somewhere in the grass and gets lost forever!
Check the perimeter of the fence-line to see if you missed any staples or anything else that may be amiss. Repeat the steps above for the rest of the fences you need to build. Let the animals out to the pasture. Once you are done building the fences, you can finally let your animals out to pasture. Keep an eye on them for an hour or so as they wander the perimeter of their new pasture to see if they find a hole to go through.
If there's no problems, then you're good to go!
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