@nao57 I was just at Tractor Supply buying stuff for my (AC powered) electric fence. Anything over 1J of output will be rated for big predator. Anything under 1J wasn't - so that's my guide on requirements for keeping wild hogs, wild dogs, the FL brown bear, etc out of my homestead area. Based on my readings, most critters will only test an area of the fence once - the shock is perfectly painful and perfectly safe, unless they are caught in the fence somehow (antlers, most commonly) and unable to escape. It does no damage to the trees, though you should still use insulators if you are using trees as your posts (as I am in some places). Even covered in rain, the current (which is high potential [voltage], low current [amperage]) will simply propagate down the bark of the tree in the case of a short, doing no damage to the tree's heartwood.
I bought the electric charger for $100. Bought 1/4 mile spools of wire (14ga for the hot) for $25 a piece, on special. I think I spent $38 on a half mile (17 gauge) of wire to go between the hots n my 5 wire fencing. From the ground, it will be hot, ground, hot, ground, hot. The spring assemblies for gauging wire tension were about $9 each, and the in line wire strainers about $4 ea. 2" barbed staples (a lot of them) around $20, a 200 pack of short insulating tubes was around $12, and I paid about the same for 25 packs of plastic screw in insulators, a bit less for poly insulators for the corners which did not have integral screws. More money in crimps to make loops where I start and end wire sections of the fence.
Ground bars will be 5/8" rebar, and I have some heavy insulated aluminum wire already for connecting the unit to the fence (#2 Mobile Home SE wire). All told, I'm into this for about $350, and will be fencing an area about 250x400. The gates (2 @ 12', 2@ 4') will end up costing me nearly as much, when all is said and done, and I'll have fenced about 2 1/4 acres. I'm not using any Tposts or the like, just cut the timber I need, dig a deep hole, and place it. Yesterday I set two 7 1/2' poles of at least 10" dia black oak just over 3' in the ground, each. By comparison, driving the rebar grounding rods will be downright pleasant. I have clay soils.
Hope that helps. (also, my charger is WAY larger than I need for such a small area - but will allow for future expansion, as my total property is 30+ acres, and I expect multiple subdivisions of it with electric fencing sections.