Baymule’s Fence

Baymule

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My road in front of the farm yesterday after the rain. Had a funeral visitation to go to yesterday afternoon, my little car sloshed through it. Most of the road is good, but not this part. LOL

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Now more fence pictures!

This is a homemade gadget for rolling out barbed wire. It’s a tractor implement disc blade, wheels on it, pulled by a 4 wheeler.

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This is the wire stretcher they used. Those pins are hammered down, holding the wire firmly. When Bennett, Peggy and I put up fence, they had a home made stretcher, two 2x4s bolted together with the wire between them. But the tighter it was pulled, the 2x4 stretcher slid down the wire bunching up the vertical wires, or stays, rendering a good length of that expensive wire useless. This marvelous wire stretcher did not slip or damage the wire.

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Beside every H brace they drove in. 6 1/2 foot T-post. They used the heavy homemade T-post driver, then turned it upside down to use the flat top to finish pounding the post down to ground level. I asked why and was told to keep the H brace from moving. They wire wrapped it and secured it firmly.

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This was the huge rotten tree on front fenceline , they cut the stump as low as possible without getting the chainsaw in the dirt (dirt dulls the chain and damages it) then they cut a groove through the stump for the wire. The stump will eventually rot away and I’ll fill it in with dirt.

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This is the H brace I built months ago, when there was still forest behind it. I watched the men inspect it, decide to use it and they reinforced it. On every cross bar on every H brace they pounded four 6” long galvanized ring shank nails on each end. Galvanized, they explained, holds up a long time. Regular nails are corroded by the chemicals in the posts.

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From the H brace to the corner where the fence goes to the right to make that L shape.

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I had them put a 16’ gate in the corner. That’s so I can go out on my tractor and maintain a fire lane on the other side of the fence. The ground takes a dip so I filled the gap with pieces of pine from the clearcut. It passed Anatolian inspection. I will get dirt to fill that in and probably lay a hog or cow panel under the gate to deter digging in or out.

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This is the corner where the fence turns right. It goes to the dividing line between me and Peggy and Bennett.

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Hope y’all enjoyed the fence pictures! I’m loving my new fence!
 

Baymule

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Who let the dogs out???

Front corner by driveway. The Anatolians sat on the other side of the driveway barking and hating on the fence crew. LOL The dogs ran the whole field, sniffing and smelling everything. When they were finally satisfied, they went back to “their” field. I put them up, then let Sentry in by himself. I had that funeral visitation to go to, but I will let each dog run the new field alone, and I’ll work with each one individually.

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Time to let the sheep graze some of that grass I’ve been looking at for over a year!

9 days old, dock id tasty!

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This sight makes me happy. The girls dropped their heads and tore that grass up!

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Run! Play! Fat bellied ewes enjoyed the beautiful day.

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Bruce

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Late to the party as usual. I didn't even know you had a fence thread until you mentioned it in another. Great job by all! I agree it was a good decision to hire out the fence clearing and rebuild. By yourself, or with the occasional help of Bennet and Peggy, it would have taken months and you would be broken.

Not even Chase’s 85 HP tractor could pull them out, it raised his back wheels off the ground!
IF you can get close to the posts with the tractor, the 3 point has a much higher lift capacity than the front loader and being close to the machine, you likely wouldn't raise the front end. But the down side is the very short lift distance, you would have to rechain at least once if not twice I would guess. But with one on the ground and one on the tractor that wouldn't be a big deal.

That's months of clearing out in just an hour!!
And it probably ripped out a lot of roots that would have been tough to do by hand.

That huge tree leaning over the road? With the rotten streak?
My town has a right of way 25' from the centerline of the road. That tree would have been in that space and therefore their problem. BUT, if it isn't going to cause them trouble near term they probably wouldn't prioritize removing it.

Good that you had someone with a bucket truck drop it in pieces. Cutting something like that tree at the bottom, even if there is no concern about destroying fences or structures, is dangerous. The whole thing could fall apart while it is being cut.

I’ve been pulling and digging green briar roots all day.
Does Marigold have a set of pallet forks? Dedicated, not the clamp on the bucket so you can bend it type. You could maybe dig down under those roots with the forks to loosen them up. I've popped some fairly decent size rocks out of my field that way. Way bigger than I could have gotten out by hand.

Most of the road is good, but not this part.
Looks WAY better than our road! I went to the grocery store this morning. It was impossible to miss a lot of the pot holes since they were having a big, extended, family gathering stretching most of the 3/4 mile.
 

Baymule

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@Bruce fence guy didn’t have a bucket truck, he cut it but it was so rotten that it broke off. I OK’ed it with neighbor on fence, the fence crew fixed it back.

Marigold only has clamp on forks.

Technically my property goes to center of road. Way back when, land owners used their land to make roads. Tree inside my fence, county wouldn’t touch it.

I tried backing up Marigold to posts, none of them came up. She’s too small. Only had to leave a half dozen in the fence. Don’t know that the back end of Chase’s tractor could’ve pulled them out, some looked like they were growing through BIG roots. Plus he used the bucket to push briars out of the way so I didn’t tear myself up too bad.
 
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