GoodLineNotSquare
Member
But as we have ~700m to renew, I think any suggestions will be useful.
We've recently moved into a house with 5-6 acres, split across 3 paddocks. The paddocks were set up 12 years ago on former arable land, with a mix of post-and-rail fencing and hedges backed/fronted with horse netting (the latter mainly on a boundary facing a neighbour's paddock).
I've spent quite a lot of time out with screwdriver and replacement wood patching up the p&r fencing, and wedging wobbly posts, and we're read that 10 years is generally considered the usable lifetime of wooden fencing. Also, Mrs GLNS's cob has a knack of sticking his head between the rails to reach the grass in the adjacent field and wrenching the top rail off on the way out. If that bit of p&r goes, it's going to be an awkward discussion with the currently friendly neighbouring farm as to why exactly our horses are wandering around in their OSR field.
We're waiting on one quote and have a second potential contractor booked in.
What would you do? I've seen suggestions for PVC fencing, using horse netting with a top rail, using post & 3 rails vs post & 4 rails... What keeps your horses from straying?
We've recently moved into a house with 5-6 acres, split across 3 paddocks. The paddocks were set up 12 years ago on former arable land, with a mix of post-and-rail fencing and hedges backed/fronted with horse netting (the latter mainly on a boundary facing a neighbour's paddock).
I've spent quite a lot of time out with screwdriver and replacement wood patching up the p&r fencing, and wedging wobbly posts, and we're read that 10 years is generally considered the usable lifetime of wooden fencing. Also, Mrs GLNS's cob has a knack of sticking his head between the rails to reach the grass in the adjacent field and wrenching the top rail off on the way out. If that bit of p&r goes, it's going to be an awkward discussion with the currently friendly neighbouring farm as to why exactly our horses are wandering around in their OSR field.
We're waiting on one quote and have a second potential contractor booked in.
What would you do? I've seen suggestions for PVC fencing, using horse netting with a top rail, using post & 3 rails vs post & 4 rails... What keeps your horses from straying?