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 Expert
Posts: 1395
       Location: Missouri | lonely va barrelxr - 2018-11-29 8:42 AM
Tell your hubby that you want vinyl. We have it around 90% of our farm and it is wonderful. Was cheaper than wood, no screws, nails or splinters. Is way easier to repair than wood! My Ramm fencing around the arena is a mess. If the horses lean on it it stretches and is almost impossible to tighten back. You can do vinyl 3 rail, 4 rail 5 rail, you can put up with electric reinforcement easily, and horses don't have vet bills after a run in with the fencing.Â
Curious how long you have had your vinyl fencing? |
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Married to a Louie Lover
Posts: 3303
    
| MOGirl07 - 2018-11-29 7:39 AM
uno-dos-tres! - 2018-11-29 4:28 AM
With the continous you don't have to weld and fabricate at the location as much. I like to see the pipe fit the layout of the land. The look with some continous fence isn't as sharp looking to me. If you can weld a little and have flat land the continous is not a bad idea. If you have any welders in the area I would ask them to bid it. In the long run you may love the look of a custom job along with the custom fit.Â
We have three pipe fence on our current farm. I like it more than when we had a four strand pipe. My husband is going to start the horse pens on our ranch in about a year. I want a three rung again. One thing I won't do again is paint my pipe! All brown natural isn't that bad looking. We have lot's of pipe on the ranch and the paint has flaked off, I really like the brown weathered look more than flaked paint.Â
We have our pastures done in 1661-3 staytuff fencing. I love it! Very good control of hogs and even our bulls respect the fence. Horses can be kept behind it across from each other with the height we've not had any issues. If you have other stock to keep in go this route. Â
Thanks for your input! We know plenty of welders.....sounds like continuous wouldnt be the way to go for us. I like to se the fence fit the layout of the land also and it would drive me bananas if it didnt.
Does pipe fencing rust?
Yes it will, hence the rustic rusty brown look. But surface rust. It will take a long time for it to rust to the point of degradation.
Depending where you’re at in Missouri there’s a fencing outfit in Lancaster that does pipe fence, we buy some supplies off them but don’t get down south of the state line much on jobs. I’m not sure if they just do continuous or welding pipe. We manage to follow the lay of the land reasonably well with continuous, unless you’ve got some real goat hills. |
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 Reaching for the stars....
Posts: 12708
     
| MOGirl07 - 2018-11-29 12:05 PM lonely va barrelxr - 2018-11-29 8:42 AM Tell your hubby that you want vinyl. We have it around 90% of our farm and it is wonderful. Was cheaper than wood, no screws, nails or splinters. Is way easier to repair than wood! My Ramm fencing around the arena is a mess. If the horses lean on it it stretches and is almost impossible to tighten back. You can do vinyl 3 rail, 4 rail 5 rail, you can put up with electric reinforcement easily, and horses don't have vet bills after a run in with the fencing. Curious how long you have had your vinyl fencing?
We had our vinyl install in 2002. It does get a little mildew growth in the summer but it freezes off in the winter. From as close as 30 feet you can't see it. Looks great all the time. |
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 Expert
Posts: 1395
       Location: Missouri | OhMax - 2018-11-29 11:41 AM
MOGirl07 - 2018-11-29 7:39 AM
uno-dos-tres! - 2018-11-29 4:28 AM
With the continous you don't have to weld and fabricate at the location as much. I like to see the pipe fit the layout of the land. The look with some continous fence isn't as sharp looking to me. If you can weld a little and have flat land the continous is not a bad idea. If you have any welders in the area I would ask them to bid it. In the long run you may love the look of a custom job along with the custom fit.Â
We have three pipe fence on our current farm. I like it more than when we had a four strand pipe. My husband is going to start the horse pens on our ranch in about a year. I want a three rung again. One thing I won't do again is paint my pipe! All brown natural isn't that bad looking. We have lot's of pipe on the ranch and the paint has flaked off, I really like the brown weathered look more than flaked paint.Â
We have our pastures done in 1661-3 staytuff fencing. I love it! Very good control of hogs and even our bulls respect the fence. Horses can be kept behind it across from each other with the height we've not had any issues. If you have other stock to keep in go this route. Â
Thanks for your input! We know plenty of welders.....sounds like continuous wouldnt be the way to go for us. I like to se the fence fit the layout of the land also and it would drive me bananas if it didnt.
Does pipe fencing rust?
Yes it will, hence the rustic rusty brown look. But surface rust. It will take a long time for it to rust to the point of degradation.
Depending where you’re at in Missouri there’s a fencing outfit in Lancaster that does pipe fence, we buy some supplies off them but don’t get down south of the state line much on jobs. I’m not sure if they just do continuous or welding pipe. We manage to follow the lay of the land reasonably well with continuous, unless you’ve got some real goat hills.
I'm in the SE area of the state....so Lancaster is quite a drive I think. :( |
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Elite Veteran
Posts: 1094
    Location: Idahome | We have started fencing and replacing fence on our 5 acres. We went with the Stay Tuf woven wire with pipe posts and top rail. It is much more durable that your woven fence from the farm store. It is a little more costly up front, but will be there forever and little to no maintenance. If you do it yourself, it is not hard but can take some time. We went with it over doing continuous fence because it was a little cheaper and we didn't have to worry about something getting ran into straight pipe and hurting themselves. We have had calves run into the stay tuf in the arena and they just bounce right off with no bend in the wire. |
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 Hog Tie My Mojo
Posts: 4847
       Location: Opelousas, LA | We have the Ramm fence that looks like board fence and I love it! We did run a strand of cheap hot fence along the top to keep horses from leaning on it but you can't see it at all from a distance.
Our cows do push on it if they are out in the pastures with it, but a strand of hot fence would fix that. I also had a horse paw the fence apparently, and hung his shoe on one of the wires that makes up the rail, I found the shoe hanging in the fence. Guess that could have been a bad deal had the shoe not come off because the fence won't break.
I also would build real, heavy duty H-braces instead of the braced up corner posts the company suggests. Maybe its because we get so much rain down here, but the corner posts we were supposed to build would not have lasted for two years down here.
Overall, I love my fence. We did four rails and have had babies run through it, flip over it and try to jump it, minimal hair missing scrapes and minimal fence repair needed, even after storms knock tree limbs down on it. |
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 Expert
Posts: 1395
       Location: Missouri | KylaKris - 2018-11-29 4:09 PM
We have started fencing and replacing fence on our 5 acres. We went with the Stay Tuf woven wire with pipe posts and top rail. It is much more durable that your woven fence from the farm store. It is a little more costly up front, but will be there forever and little to no maintenance. If you do it yourself, it is not hard but can take some time. We went with it over doing continuous fence because it was a little cheaper and we didn't have to worry about something getting ran into straight pipe and hurting themselves. We have had calves run into the stay tuf in the arena and they just bounce right off with no bend in the wire.
This may be an option. I was digging around looking at prices on pipe fencing and I really dont think itll be in our budget to do a 3 or 4 tail pipe fence. Ugh. But pipe top rail and posts with stay tuff....maybe! Which of the stay tuff woven wire fencing options did you go with? I see there are a few on their website. |
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Elite Veteran
Posts: 1094
    Location: Idahome | http://staytuff.com/Horse.asp This is what we did in the 61" height so they cant put their head over the fence. The bottom is smaller squares so we can put our goats out as well and don't have to worry about them sticking a head through. |
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 Experienced Mouse Trapper
Posts: 3106
   Location: North Dakota | we have "Runnings" stores here, they sell 20' sections of 5 pipe panels for very reasonable. I think that would be a good investment! We are slowly converting our arena from woven horse wire to this-buy a couple panels a year and don't even notice the pinch in the pocket (they are about $130 each) We have our corrals completely done. It's super nice, easy to put up and very durable! |
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 Expert
Posts: 1395
       Location: Missouri | KylaKris - 2018-11-30 9:25 AM
http://staytuff.com/Horse.asp This is what we did in the 61" height so they cant put their head over the fence. The bottom is smaller squares so we can put our goats out as well and don't have to worry about them sticking a head through. Â
Thank you! I'm wanting something extra tall so they don't do that. I get sick of my fences sagging. Ugh. (I will use a strand of hot wire when we redo. Just haven't gotten to it yet.)  |
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 Expert
Posts: 1395
       Location: Missouri | LMS - 2018-11-30 10:32 AM
we have "Runnings" stores here, they sell 20' sections of 5 pipe panels for very reasonable. I think that would be a good investment! We are slowly converting our arena from woven horse wire to this-buy a couple panels a year and don't even notice the pinch in the pocket (they are about $130 each) We have our corrals completely done. It's super nice, easy to put up and very durable!Â
Could you attach a pic? I'm interested to see what this looks like. We don't have any Runnings stores in this area, but I may be able to find something similar at Tractor Supply. I like this idea!  |
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Married to a Louie Lover
Posts: 3303
    
| MOGirl07 - 2018-11-30 2:15 PM
LMS - 2018-11-30 10:32 AM
we have "Runnings" stores here, they sell 20' sections of 5 pipe panels for very reasonable. I think that would be a good investment! We are slowly converting our arena from woven horse wire to this-buy a couple panels a year and don't even notice the pinch in the pocket (they are about $130 each) We have our corrals completely done. It's super nice, easy to put up and very durable!Â
Could you attach a pic? I'm interested to see what this looks like. We don't have any Runnings stores in this area, but I may be able to find something similar at Tractor Supply. I like this idea! 
$130 for a 5 bar panel is high... very high.
There are 2 or 3 welders around I can think of around here who build them for $75-$85 depending on how many you’re buying, including connectors and clips. Skip the farm store markup and ask around about a fabricator, you’ll be able to do twice as much for the same drop in bank account.
We also buy our gates through them so they match the fence and are build much better than the tubular steel gates the farm stores carry.
For gateways in our lots we use 3” pipe overhead so nothing ever sags. |
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 Expert
Posts: 1395
       Location: Missouri | OhMax - 2018-12-01 7:43 AM
MOGirl07 - 2018-11-30 2:15 PM
LMS - 2018-11-30 10:32 AM
we have "Runnings" stores here, they sell 20' sections of 5 pipe panels for very reasonable. I think that would be a good investment! We are slowly converting our arena from woven horse wire to this-buy a couple panels a year and don't even notice the pinch in the pocket (they are about $130 each) We have our corrals completely done. It's super nice, easy to put up and very durable!Â
Could you attach a pic? I'm interested to see what this looks like. We don't have any Runnings stores in this area, but I may be able to find something similar at Tractor Supply. I like this idea! 
$130 for a 5 bar panel is high... very high.
There are 2 or 3 welders around I can think of around here who build them for $75-$85 depending on how many you’re buying, including connectors and clips. Skip the farm store markup and ask around about a fabricator, you’ll be able to do twice as much for the same drop in bank account.
We also buy our gates through them so they match the fence and are build much better than the tubular steel gates the farm stores carry.
For gateways in our lots we use 3” pipe overhead so nothing ever sags.
I dont feel like we'd need 5 pipe. 4 pipe would be plenty. I'm having my husband check with some people he knows thru work that may want a side job for cash. |
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 Experienced Mouse Trapper
Posts: 3106
   Location: North Dakota | I’m going to send u a pm |
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Married to a Louie Lover
Posts: 3303
    
| MOGirl07 - 2018-12-02 1:50 PM
OhMax - 2018-12-01 7:43 AM
MOGirl07 - 2018-11-30 2:15 PM
LMS - 2018-11-30 10:32 AM
we have "Runnings" stores here, they sell 20' sections of 5 pipe panels for very reasonable. I think that would be a good investment! We are slowly converting our arena from woven horse wire to this-buy a couple panels a year and don't even notice the pinch in the pocket (they are about $130 each) We have our corrals completely done. It's super nice, easy to put up and very durable!Â
Could you attach a pic? I'm interested to see what this looks like. We don't have any Runnings stores in this area, but I may be able to find something similar at Tractor Supply. I like this idea! 
$130 for a 5 bar panel is high... very high.
There are 2 or 3 welders around I can think of around here who build them for $75-$85 depending on how many you’re buying, including connectors and clips. Skip the farm store markup and ask around about a fabricator, you’ll be able to do twice as much for the same drop in bank account.
We also buy our gates through them so they match the fence and are build much better than the tubular steel gates the farm stores carry.
For gateways in our lots we use 3” pipe overhead so nothing ever sags.
I dont feel like we'd need 5 pipe. 4 pipe would be plenty. I'm having my husband check with some people he knows thru work that may want a side job for cash.
Price out each - generally not a lot more. We don’t go less than 5, and a lot of ours are 6. They can’t/don’t try to shove their head through and graze, which cuts down on bumps/lumps/rubbed manes etc. We’ve also run some cattle in the last though and may again in the future, so all our fences are built with that in mind.
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 Expert
Posts: 1395
       Location: Missouri | OhMax - 2018-12-02 8:54 PM
MOGirl07 - 2018-12-02 1:50 PM
OhMax - 2018-12-01 7:43 AM
MOGirl07 - 2018-11-30 2:15 PM
LMS - 2018-11-30 10:32 AM
we have "Runnings" stores here, they sell 20' sections of 5 pipe panels for very reasonable. I think that would be a good investment! We are slowly converting our arena from woven horse wire to this-buy a couple panels a year and don't even notice the pinch in the pocket (they are about $130 each) We have our corrals completely done. It's super nice, easy to put up and very durable!Â
Could you attach a pic? I'm interested to see what this looks like. We don't have any Runnings stores in this area, but I may be able to find something similar at Tractor Supply. I like this idea! 
$130 for a 5 bar panel is high... very high.
There are 2 or 3 welders around I can think of around here who build them for $75-$85 depending on how many you’re buying, including connectors and clips. Skip the farm store markup and ask around about a fabricator, you’ll be able to do twice as much for the same drop in bank account.
We also buy our gates through them so they match the fence and are build much better than the tubular steel gates the farm stores carry.
For gateways in our lots we use 3” pipe overhead so nothing ever sags.
I dont feel like we'd need 5 pipe. 4 pipe would be plenty. I'm having my husband check with some people he knows thru work that may want a side job for cash.
Price out each - generally not a lot more. We don’t go less than 5, and a lot of ours are 6. They can’t/don’t try to shove their head through and graze, which cuts down on bumps/lumps/rubbed manes etc. We’ve also run some cattle in the last though and may again in the future, so all our fences are built with that in mind.
Thanks Oh Max. I didnt think about this (them sticking their heads thru/cattle). We eventually want to get a few calves each year so that is something we'll need to keep in mind.  |
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Member
Posts: 15

| I've seen many wood-framed garden fences that look nice enough to satisfy the snootiest neighbor, but strong enough to keep your horses in. I am also considering such a fence after finishing our patio ( www.royalcovers.com/2018/01/backyard-patio-extension-mesa-az-85205/ )
Please keep your horses safe. |
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boon
Posts: 1

| If you like the look of vinyl I would recommend checking out HDPE fencing. Its also a plastic polymer but MUCH stronger than vinyl. My husband and I recently purchased about 2000 feet of fencing from www.foreverfarmproducts.org and we are so happy. It's guaranteed not to crack, shatter, or splinter and requires even less maintanence than vinyl. I guess HDPE is a plastic that is used by the government a lot because it's so heavy duty. It's also recyclable so we were able to get a grant for our project because we were using sustainalbe 'green' materials!  |
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Nut Case Expert
Posts: 9305
      Location: Tulsa, Ok | We put up continuous fence around all our lots last summer. We are really happy with it. Goes up fast. I like it a lot better than the pipe and sucker rod fence we have around a lot of pur place |
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