Cross fencing in 2 hours....

MDres

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I absolutely love working with step-in posts and electric tape. My pastures are perimeter fenced with 2x4 no-climb woven wire fence. They are "permanently" cross-fenced into ~1 acre sections using T-posts and electric tape. I cross-fence them even further when the grass is prime into 1/4 acre sections, which forces the horses to graze ALL of the grass, instead of just scalping the clover.

This picture shows an acre I cross-fenced into 4 lots - one at the head, and 3 strips off of it. That way, I can access all the lots from the horses dry-lot. At the far end, the tape is anchored to half-round wooden posts. At the gate end, I used H-braces made of T-posts. You can find the H-brace hardware at TSC - it is super simple to work with. It does need to be cross-braced with something for maximum strength. I used coated cable in an X-pattern. Doing so allowed me to have the T-posts facing opposite directions so they could be used to attach the tape hardware.

ALL of this took me about 2 hours. Not days.

I am posting this because I drive by so many facilities that try to use tape/wire/step-in posts to cross fence, and it is an EPIC FAIL. I wish everyone knew how simple it is to make it look GOOD and have it last all season, or longer. The only maintenance I have to do to this set-up is occasionally hand tighten the tape, and maybe reset a post every now and then if a deer knocks it down. When installed right, there is no reason it needs to sag or fall down.

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secuono

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People make it harder than it is. You just measure it out with string, add posts and then add the hot wire. Done.
I don't know how people mess that up, lol.
 

MDres

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secuono said:
People make it harder than it is. You just measure it out with string, add posts and then add the hot wire. Done.
I don't know how people mess that up, lol.
Heck, you can do it easier than that! Let the wire (or tape) be your string for keeping the fenceline straight. I only use string for setting the field fence posts, because those posts have to be set before I can put the fence up. With the tape or wire, I can set the tape/wire first, and then set the posts every X number of strides. If you have the tape on the tensioners correctly, you can pull it REALLY tight and straight. The harder you pull, the tighter it locks into the tensioner.
 
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