Looking for Advice and Experience

AClark

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Yikes! That looks like my ex husbands knee, he had had 3 knee surgeries on it. Definitely painful!
 

Bruce

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View attachment 28723 @Bruce this is a pic of the wire, it is barbLess wire, but is 2strands that are twisted like barbed wire. However, barbed wire is the most commonly used for bracing here.

OK that would be hard to use with a strainer. No one sells real brace wire? Or is this stuff just cheaper? I guess you have no way to compare but I wonder how it "slides" around the post compared to single strand brace wire when being tightened. Barbs wouldn't slide at all once the barbs lodge into the post. Sounds like a lot of work for no good reason.
 

Latestarter

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If you're twisting the wire, I shouldn't think the wire would need to slide around the post much at all... The tightening would be as a result of slack being taken up by the twist between the posts. The wire obviously does need to move with a strainer.
 

CntryBoy777

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Not sure about the price @Bruce , this was $60 for a spool of over 1300'. I think it will do fine with the conduit twist rods. May be out of commission for a couple of days tho, after the goat walk today I was inside the pen and the Boys were pushing on each other, and Comet inadvertently hit the back of my messed up knee. Didn't hit it very hard, but didn't have to...pain pill time....:)
 

Bruce

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@CntryBoy777 is down for a nap! ;) Sorry the goat got you no matter that it wasn't intentional.

@greybeard posted on your journal about a galvanized rod you can get for cheap, probably better than conduit for twisting.
 

CntryBoy777

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Yeh, but got the conduit this morning 8 sticks for $23...may look to replace them in the future, but they will do for now. Ya know how it is, when ya need something ya can't Find it and when ya don't ya see it everywhere. So, going to focus on getting it done...for now anyway. I do have another issue to ask advice with, but will be later tonite or tomorrow. First, I have to figure out how to ask it so that it makes sense. :)
 

Bruce

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Or buy it now, figuring you are going to need it later and when later comes, can't find it!
 

CntryBoy777

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We call them hen-bit here, but @Bruce said it was better known as ground ivy. It is prolific here, and even the commercial fields around here that get sprayed are full of it. It dies back after it blooms, so we just don't worry about it. The goats, chickens, and ducks don't even eat it. The bees, honey and bumble, sure do like it tho.
 

greybeard

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We call them hen-bit here, but @Bruce said it was better known as ground ivy. It is prolific here, and even the commercial fields around here that get sprayed are full of it. It dies back after it blooms, so we just don't worry about it. The goats, chickens, and ducks don't even eat it. The bees, honey and bumble, sure do like it tho.
Maybe, if it has pinkish flowers, it's henbit. Odd your chickens won't eat it. My sister's chickens eat every bit they can find.
If the flowers are more blue, it's another cold season plant called Creeping Charlie--it looks a lot like henbit.
http://www.ediblewildfood.com/creeping-charlie.aspx
http://www.clemson.edu/extension/hgic/pests/weeds/hgic2321.html

I hate both of them--clog my lawnmower this time of year.
 
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