One way to modernize wooden fence posts is to paint them. There are plenty of how-to videos online featuring different paint techniques. You can also incoporate flower beds on your fence to give it a modern look.
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Palisade or stockade.
trees and wooden posts
If you mean the pillars as in the ones in the tutorial. They look like two wooden posts. Hope this helped.
Those are called pilings or dock posts. They provide structural support for the dock.
AnswerWood and lead wire. Spade to dig hole for concrete or wooden posts, a rammer to make them firm. Steel posts can be driven in with a sledge hammer. Steel wire is then strung along the posts after being tied off at one end. It is stretched or "strained up" tight, then attached to the post using staples and hammer on wooden posts; or threaded through or tied on to concrete or steel posts.Dont use lead wire, it is too soft, and toxic to stock
You stop cliff collapse with things such as evetments, steel piling, rip rap and wooden retaining posts.
Any lumber yard or home improvement store would have fence posts. retailers such as home deport, lowes, or menards. There maybe a shortage in your area since there was a hurricane. it depends on the damage done by the storm.
Barbed wire needs to be stretched tight. This requires solid posts at the ends or the wire will slack over time. I would speak with a fence contractor to see if your posts will support the wire.
From the ground up: Concrete foundation (piers) with wooden timbers for posts and crossbeams. Then wooden tracks. Place car on track and let it go. Keep both hands in the air for the entire ride for added pleasure!
Yes, you can install wooden fence posts yourself. You will need to make sure each post is 2 feet longer than the height you want your fence to be at because it is recommended that each post be set 18 inches into the ground. http://www.diylife.com/2008/03/25/diy-basics-setting-a-wood-fence-post/
Everyone has seen fences that are no longer level. Though constructed with the greatest of care, these fences suffered from a simple, but fatal flaw. Their builders used too much concrete to set the posts. When setting wooden fence posts, the expert builder will dig a sufficiently sized hole and plumb and level the post in the hole. Then, and this is the important point, he will fill the hole only halfway with concrete. After the concrete sets, he fills the rest of the hole with soil. The result of this simple trick is less upheaval and settling of your wooden fence posts during the winter months.