Do:
- Be aware of safety – get a friend to help, and use Safety glasses and protective clothing with wire – it can be dangerous
- Clear the ground that you about to fence – slash the grass, remove old fences and machinery.
- Use a Sight/Guide wire.
- Strain fence wire from the bottom first, and then work up , if you start straining the top wires first, you will pull the fence in
- Strain your fence wires and meshes closer to ends of fence……if it breaks, you will only need to repair a small amount of the fence
- Use a wire spinner for fence wire – making sure that the paying off side of the coil is on the top – this will be where the tag and knot ties are.
- Work out which side of the fence to have your wire on.
- Walk along your fence as you strain it up to make sure that it is not caught on any posts.
- Learn how to do an end knot
- Learn how to strip off pickets from a Mesh fence, so that you can tie it with an End Knot or wire joiner
- Hammer in Staples at angle, so that timber posts have less chance of splitting.
- Ensure that StockPosts have their holes lined up, with the hole side pointing away from the fence.
- Use Fencing clips – 3 or 4 per post
Don’t
- Drive Barbed Staples all the way in – it holds wire up, not tight, it should be able to move
- Attach Barbed Staples to the Picket wire of your mesh, just attach to the line wire – not the horizontal one.
- Thread fence wires though fence posts
- have your Fence Strainer Handles getting caught in the the fence pointing away from fence (not against the fence)
- strain Mesh Fence to tight – the crimps in the mesh are there for a reason, they should only have 1/2 to 3/4 taken out…should spring out
- Install your Mesh upside down! – small opening holes at bottom
- Wrap you mesh around you End post without tying it properly with an End Knot or Wire Joiner