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Questions on Building Fence (cattle).
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<blockquote data-quote="backhoeboogie" data-source="post: 545767" data-attributes="member: 3162"><p>Nothing wooden for me. If you get burned out one time in a wild fire, you'll understand why I don't use wood. </p><p></p><p>Drive those T-Posts with a tractor bucket. Cut yourself a piece of pipe 55 inches long since you know that is your finished post height. Slide the pipe over the T-Post onto the spade and push it in with the front bucket until there is nothing showing but pipe. Then slide it back off and onto the next post. If you hit a root or piece of gravel, the T-post cannot bend with the pipe around it. Two people can drive 85 posts in an hour and a half like that. We just drove that many with the backhoe front bucket on May 20th. The hardest part was loading/unloading the posts out of the truck into the front bucket (piece of cake).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="backhoeboogie, post: 545767, member: 3162"] Nothing wooden for me. If you get burned out one time in a wild fire, you'll understand why I don't use wood. Drive those T-Posts with a tractor bucket. Cut yourself a piece of pipe 55 inches long since you know that is your finished post height. Slide the pipe over the T-Post onto the spade and push it in with the front bucket until there is nothing showing but pipe. Then slide it back off and onto the next post. If you hit a root or piece of gravel, the T-post cannot bend with the pipe around it. Two people can drive 85 posts in an hour and a half like that. We just drove that many with the backhoe front bucket on May 20th. The hardest part was loading/unloading the posts out of the truck into the front bucket (piece of cake). [/QUOTE]
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