Buck Fencing

hilarie

Loving the herd life
Joined
Nov 17, 2009
Messages
147
Reaction score
123
Points
182
Location
Coventry, CT
This may be way out in left field for some people, and I'm sure many people don't have access to my "buried treasure." But there's a metal scrapyard right in my country town, and you wouldn't *believe* what I've scored there: stainless steel buckets, strainers, stainless spoons, and ALL my fencing. I look for cattle fence because it's stronger, but even if it's just goat fence, it's about 25% of the cost of retail (you pay by the pound depending on material) and I get my T-posts the same way. Ditto gates, which can be really expensive. OneFineAcre has it right: you're definitely going to have repairs - it's a downside - but for what I paid, I'm OK with it.
 

goatgurl

Herd Master
Joined
May 22, 2014
Messages
2,048
Reaction score
3,978
Points
353
Location
Arklahoma
oh hilarie I'm jealous of your scrapyard!! i stopped a guy at a scrapyard once and bought a big iron kettle off his trailer before he crossed the scales but they won't let you go in and look around. with the cost of fencing, etc you have a gold mine
 

hilarie

Loving the herd life
Joined
Nov 17, 2009
Messages
147
Reaction score
123
Points
182
Location
Coventry, CT
goatgurl - I really do and I know it. A lot of scrapyards won't let you poke around inside - liability and all that. We've gone to great pains to ingratiate ourselves with them: stay out of their way, don't climb the piles of stuff, keep our eyes open. We bring a lot of stuff TO them too, which makes them money. I even bring them goat cheese now and then. They know now some of the things we want and will often set them aside for us.
 

Latest posts

Top