Cap are you going to have to pull any stumps? Or were the trees just overhanging? And yep, DH and I are now both up to date on our Tetanus but we didn't get a scratch on us today. Too much experience with handling barbed wire. Give me field fencing any day.
We got the wire out of the pasture and in the ravine where we wanted it. I need to get some pictures of some of our ravines for reference. The one we worked on today started out being about 10 feet deep and wide. We started loading dead fall into it, then erosion caused two trees to collapse down into it. DH went to work with his chain saw and cut the downed trees so the could fall into the ravine. Now the ravine is only about 8 feet deep and the sides are tapered enough that I could climb down and pull wire down onto the dead fall. It's amazing how much force the water has in those ravines when it rains hard. Some of the dead trees that we tossed into that ravine are a foot plus diameter and cut into 8 foot sections. They have been moved maybe 10-15 feet until they lodge in the bank. This ravine is the main one that runs through our timber and feeds into the creek at the east property line. That creek feeds into the Chariton River and since we live on a ridge, everything runs downhill.
On the up side, we get a lot of sand build up in the ravines now so we have a never ending supply.
We got the wire out of the pasture and in the ravine where we wanted it. I need to get some pictures of some of our ravines for reference. The one we worked on today started out being about 10 feet deep and wide. We started loading dead fall into it, then erosion caused two trees to collapse down into it. DH went to work with his chain saw and cut the downed trees so the could fall into the ravine. Now the ravine is only about 8 feet deep and the sides are tapered enough that I could climb down and pull wire down onto the dead fall. It's amazing how much force the water has in those ravines when it rains hard. Some of the dead trees that we tossed into that ravine are a foot plus diameter and cut into 8 foot sections. They have been moved maybe 10-15 feet until they lodge in the bank. This ravine is the main one that runs through our timber and feeds into the creek at the east property line. That creek feeds into the Chariton River and since we live on a ridge, everything runs downhill.
On the up side, we get a lot of sand build up in the ravines now so we have a never ending supply.


