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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Wood Fence Post Question
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<blockquote data-quote="Cross-7" data-source="post: 1297454" data-attributes="member: 24538"><p>Cedars post last forever, looks good and add a couple cedar staves between each post and you've got a really good fence.</p><p>The bad </p><p>If there is a fire you lose your post. </p><p>Like the post in the picture in a few years that bark will slough off and ever tie wire will have to be retied.</p><p>If wild cattle hit that fence trying to get through they snap the post.</p><p></p><p>With T-post and 2-7/8 pipe every 10th T-post or so you don't have worry about fire, retying wires to post, they don't break off if cattle hit it (might stretch the wire or bust some wires)</p><p></p><p>If you don't have a lot to maintain you can't beat the look of cedar post and staves though</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Cross-7, post: 1297454, member: 24538"] Cedars post last forever, looks good and add a couple cedar staves between each post and you've got a really good fence. The bad If there is a fire you lose your post. Like the post in the picture in a few years that bark will slough off and ever tie wire will have to be retied. If wild cattle hit that fence trying to get through they snap the post. With T-post and 2-7/8 pipe every 10th T-post or so you don't have worry about fire, retying wires to post, they don't break off if cattle hit it (might stretch the wire or bust some wires) If you don't have a lot to maintain you can't beat the look of cedar post and staves though [/QUOTE]
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