World Fence News

July 2019

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78 • JULY 2019 • WORLD FENCE NEWS DECORATIVE PRIVACY FENCE World's Largest Slat Inventory • Buy Direct • 20-Minute Quotes • Best Price • Prompt Delivery • Top-Notch Service 1.800.574.1076 • www.eprivacylink.com SLATS Bottom Locking Double-Wall Slat with EZ Slat Single-Wall Slat Ultimate Slat™ Double-wall construction with 4 side fins MADE IN USA We've stocked our warehouses with our three most popular slats in all colors and heights, and they are ready for shipping. Call for a FREE price quote today. Bottom Locking Double-Wall Slats Dog pen job hounds fencer to the end continued from page 46 matted floor deep! I borrow a big ro- to-tiller from my son-in-law. It can eat up 4" asphalt with no sweat. But it takes 12 or 13 passes just to loosen 2" of this ground at a time! We spend a whole day run- ning back and forth, and finally get the ground softened up enough so the gas digger can punch holes if three of us push down on it at the same time! (It's a "one-manner," by the way!) We set the posts and call it quits. The next day the fun really begins! We are using 36" 12 gauge for rabbit wire. We use the roto-tiller, shovels, pick ax and a prayer to get a ditch dug; the rest of the turf is rock hard, but once it's on the shovel it turns to 5-micron fine dust and blows away on the wind! I'm considering several options at this point. Turning the whole mess over to the bonding company, plead- ing insanity, going on welfare or ap- plying for a government grant to study the sex life of South American tree toads! Maybe all of 'em. How do I get into these messes? The crew gives me an ultimatum. So I decide, let's put up some fabric! We got the rabbit wire ditch dug for the pen, so a little change of pace would give 'em hope. Boy, were they tired of digging! So we start in. We got as much fabric underground as in the air, hog ringed to every second diamond. Someone hollers, "lunch time!" I got a space maybe 6" long to hog ring and be finished, but hunger wins out and I leave it. I take pity on one dog in a tem- porary pen, and turn him loose in the new pen. I'm sure he will be there when we get back. A 30-pound dog can't possibly get out a 6" space. Wanna bet?! It's gone when we get back! I whistle my head off, but just call in a stray dog that don't even look like the escapee! I call the customer to tell him we lost the dog. When we started the job, he described this particular pooch as "just a mutt." Now he says, "Oh my Gawd, not the puppy!!" "Just a mutt" has now become a "gold mine" if I gotta pay for it! Them tree toads are looking mighty attrac- tive 'bout now! Fortunately, "the puppy" comes home that night and is still in the pen when we arrive the next day. The rab- bit wire is working! We somehow manage to get the rest of the job done, and it turns out right nice. You see one pen looking at it sideways, top rails all level, line posts straight, and somehow we managed to get the rabbit wire covered. The floor of the pen is about a foot lower than the surrounding turf, but it looks like it belongs that way. It'll probably rise on the next full moon! The customer is happy, the crew's overjoyed, and I'm worn to a frazzle! The customer gives me a check, and says, "I want you to do the same on the other side of the barn after the first of the year!" I hear a faraway voice saying, "Sure! Give us a call when you're ready!" It's my voice?! How can that be? My brain is thinking, "Over my dead body we will!"

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