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I'm building a 6' high fence and I'm having trouble with land elevations and gaps under fence????

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I'm building a 6' high fence and I'm having trouble with land elevations and gaps under fence???? hzaidi1 06-06-2007
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Posted by Colbyt on June 6, 2007, 6:12 pm

> Ok this is the deal. I live in an end unit townhome. I'm only required
> to make a corner fence since the neighbor's fence is on the other side
> I just need to join my fence with his. I've already laid out my fence
> and have all my 4x4x8 post concreted into the ground and are at equal
> heights and distances. The problem is that before I bought the fence
> boards I started to calculate the gap between the bottom of the fence
> and the ground. You want at least an inch or so room between the
> ground and the bottom of the fence. You want this so that soil dosen't
> rot the fence boards and you can deweed underneath. The problem is
> that what ever gap height you select you need to continue this so that
> it's consistent and the picket heights are all the same along the top.
> On one side of my fence that is fine and I can do this but if you
> continue around the corner the ground has a lower elevation around the
> corner and it will cause a 6" gap underneath the fence. It looks weird
> if I were to do this and I don't want to have a gap and try to mediate
> it with soil, stones etc... Do you guys have any ideas on how to deal
> with this. Looking for someone with experience in this.
>

I always temp nail the first and last board of a run after placing them on a
1" spacer. Then I stretch a taut string from one to the other. I drive a
small nail into the top of the board and use this to attach the string.

I hold the top edge of the dog-ear to the line. This ensures that the
fence overall has a gentle graduation. I guess if you had a dip in the
middle of the run, you would place a board there and work down to it and
then back up to the other side.

I almost never trim more than a few boards.

For a short run with a severe grade change I would step them down in the
exact same manner holding the side edge of the dog-ear to the line.

Colbyt



Posted by willshak on June 7, 2007, 6:55 am
on 6/6/2007 1:06 PM hzaidi1@towson.edu said the following:
> Ok this is the deal. I live in an end unit townhome. I'm only required
> to make a corner fence since the neighbor's fence is on the other side
> I just need to join my fence with his. I've already laid out my fence
> and have all my 4x4x8 post concreted into the ground and are at equal
> heights and distances. The problem is that before I bought the fence
> boards I started to calculate the gap between the bottom of the fence
> and the ground. You want at least an inch or so room between the
> ground and the bottom of the fence. You want this so that soil dosen't
> rot the fence boards and you can deweed underneath. The problem is
> that what ever gap height you select you need to continue this so that
> it's consistent and the picket heights are all the same along the top.
> On one side of my fence that is fine and I can do this but if you
> continue around the corner the ground has a lower elevation around the
> corner and it will cause a 6" gap underneath the fence. It looks weird
> if I were to do this and I don't want to have a gap and try to mediate
> it with soil, stones etc... Do you guys have any ideas on how to deal
> with this. Looking for someone with experience in this.
>
>

I had a similar problem with topography. I laid 6"x6"x8' PT timbers on
the ground between the posts under the fence to fill the gap. Besides
filling the gap, it makes it easier to weed whack along the bottom. I
live in the NE so they do get moved around a little by winter frost, but
a few whacks with a sledge puts them back in alignment.

--

Bill
In Hamptonburgh, NY
To email, remove the double zeroes after @

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