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<blockquote data-quote="Katpau" data-source="post: 1711604" data-attributes="member: 9933"><p>I have a question for those of you in the fence building business. We have never hired anyone to build fence and we have built and maintained all of the approximately 10-12 miles of fencing that is now in place. My husband and I are now in our late 60's and early 70's and we have to accept our limitations. I would like to finish the perimeter fence, so that we could graze those acres, rather than allowing the neighbors to do so. Any idea what we might expect to pay for a job like that. I am looking for a per foot estimate. I would love to get the neighbors to help with cost, but they have no incentive to do so, and I doubt they could be convinced. Our last job was replacing 1000 feet along the east border. I asked the cattle producer leasing that land to talk to the non-resident wealthy owner about doing some cost sharing on the project. They said okay, and I sent them the bill, showing materials and our hours of labor. She sent a check for ½ the materials. Apparently, our labor was worthless. I rather suspect the owner of the cattle may have led her to believe he helped. Most contracts around here make the lessee responsible for fencing. When we told him that fence was in serious need of replacement, he said he was too busy to help.</p><p></p><p>We purchased this ranch in 1991. It is a total of 925 acres, and much of it is steep and heavily wooded. The place had perimeter fence when we bought it, but most of it had probably been built in the early 1900's and it was in very poor shape. We have spent the last 30 years fencing and cross fencing the lower 550 acres. The northern slopes are the steepest and most heavily wooded and are accessible right now, only on foot or horseback. We never bothered to replace those fences, but concentrated on lower terrain, much of which could be accessed with an ATV. There may be as much as 100 acres in meadows up near the top and in small bench areas that would still make good pasture, but would require at least several miles of fence in tough terrain. This year, with the drought, I really wished we had access to those areas. Neighbors to the North and West have poor fences, and we usually end up with cattle coming in on us from their places and grazing this area. We never finished those fences, because of how difficult it would be and because we assumed water was unavailable up there. At least one small herd of the neighbors' cattle were there for several months and even open gates did not lure them down, so my water worries might have been unfounded.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Katpau, post: 1711604, member: 9933"] I have a question for those of you in the fence building business. We have never hired anyone to build fence and we have built and maintained all of the approximately 10-12 miles of fencing that is now in place. My husband and I are now in our late 60's and early 70's and we have to accept our limitations. I would like to finish the perimeter fence, so that we could graze those acres, rather than allowing the neighbors to do so. Any idea what we might expect to pay for a job like that. I am looking for a per foot estimate. I would love to get the neighbors to help with cost, but they have no incentive to do so, and I doubt they could be convinced. Our last job was replacing 1000 feet along the east border. I asked the cattle producer leasing that land to talk to the non-resident wealthy owner about doing some cost sharing on the project. They said okay, and I sent them the bill, showing materials and our hours of labor. She sent a check for ½ the materials. Apparently, our labor was worthless. I rather suspect the owner of the cattle may have led her to believe he helped. Most contracts around here make the lessee responsible for fencing. When we told him that fence was in serious need of replacement, he said he was too busy to help. We purchased this ranch in 1991. It is a total of 925 acres, and much of it is steep and heavily wooded. The place had perimeter fence when we bought it, but most of it had probably been built in the early 1900's and it was in very poor shape. We have spent the last 30 years fencing and cross fencing the lower 550 acres. The northern slopes are the steepest and most heavily wooded and are accessible right now, only on foot or horseback. We never bothered to replace those fences, but concentrated on lower terrain, much of which could be accessed with an ATV. There may be as much as 100 acres in meadows up near the top and in small bench areas that would still make good pasture, but would require at least several miles of fence in tough terrain. This year, with the drought, I really wished we had access to those areas. Neighbors to the North and West have poor fences, and we usually end up with cattle coming in on us from their places and grazing this area. We never finished those fences, because of how difficult it would be and because we assumed water was unavailable up there. At least one small herd of the neighbors' cattle were there for several months and even open gates did not lure them down, so my water worries might have been unfounded. [/QUOTE]
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