Arrive at D, turn the corner and we are heading for C. Now we have to practice our downhill fencing skills.
And below the Hornbydale entry in the all Zimbabwe Adventure Fencing Competition 2015.
Arrive at D, turn the corner and we are heading for C. Now we have to practice our downhill fencing skills.
And below the Hornbydale entry in the all Zimbabwe Adventure Fencing Competition 2015.
You have no choice but to endure more and more posts – about more and more fencing! Its that much fun as you can see in the next 3 pictures!
We are using the first 600m as our testing ground – to work on our technique and get it right – ready for more challenging times ahead of us.
Mr Artwell is actually hammering the staple sides together to make sure they are parallel and easy to hammer into the posts
And these days we can’t end a post with pictures of nice poles. (Now more important than doggie pics!)
It has really arrived! The day we start putting up the 2.1m mesh fence supplied by Fence Secure of Msasa Harare and made in Zimbabwe (also termed Veld Fence or Bonox Fence).
I will post under the alphabetical boundary sections. We are starting from point E (close to the house) and heading off to D about 250m away to the east.
I’m sure there is a technical name for this device – ‘fence grabber’ will do for now!
To pull the fence tight requires the use of a fence puller. The puller is tied on to the grabber (which is temporarily screwed down onto the fence) and then itself wraps around the straining pole (right of picture below). The straining pole has extra (barbed) wire tied down to a large stone(s) buried in the ground. You can just see the barbed wire below top right.
As we learnt the hard way – the chain must not be twisted or else, sooner or later, the puller cannot grab any more links as they are twisted out of alignment compared to the jaws.
The whole lot is tightened using the jaws, one by one, to grab and slide over successive chain links. There is a lever coming off to left below which provides the manual driving force.
And if you must be tarred and feathered at least don’t do it to yourself ‘Hamletta’!
And, finally, more of our home made poles ready to continue the fencing journey.