Side note from Meryl: Hooray! Chris is writing posts now! I’m trying to figure out how I can write who this post is published by at the top of the post instead of at the bottom so you can more easily tell who has written a post now that I have convinced Chris to start writing posts 🙂 But here is a post that has been long in the making that Chris wrote up last night. I hope this helps! (we’ve had lots of emails of fence questions and this post is very delayed)
Here are some basics on how to build a wood fence.
1. Determine layout of posts and mark the ground. The easiest way to do this is to find your beginning and ending points and attach a landscape line to each so you have a nice straight line to follow. You’ll also use this line to help you align the posts.
2. Dig holes for posts. Depending upon the size of the posts and your location (frost depth) you’ll have to go deeper/wider than we did, but we made ours about 10″ in diameter and 18″ deep.
3. One by one, put the posts in the holes and fill in with concrete around the post. Bring each post up to the string line so that it’s barely touching the line and then use your level to get it plumb.
A post level is a great time saver here because it determines plumb on two planes at once.
Brace each post using 2x4s. If you make the concrete stiff, you shouldn’t have to fiddle too much with bracing. Periodically check the alignment of the posts with the string line by sighting down the line and making sure they all line up nicely.
4. Once the posts are in and the concrete is set (24 hours is best), it’s time to assemble the fence. Our fence design was pretty simple – 1 2×6 positioned vertically fastened with 3″ screws toenail style into the posts, 1 grooved 2×4 with groove up attached with pl premium and 3″ screws to the 2×6, 1×8 slats dropped into the bottom 2×4 groove, and 1 grooved 2×4 with groove down fastened to posts with 3″ screws and to slats with pl premium and a 1 1/2″ screw every 2′.
5. The last step was to cut the top of the posts off to make them flush with the top of the fence.
6. Finish the fence with whatever product you want, or leave it as is and allow it to naturally weather
(some of the photos in this post are taken from other fences we have built, but the instructions build the fence in the last two photos above)
Bunny @ 86n It says
You make it sounds so easy! 😉
stpaulhaus says
I'm jealous you are fence building in December. that doesn't happen in my neck of the woods. Actually it has been so mild here we probably could put one up right now. We are planning on tearing out an old chainlink in the spring and putting up a pressure-treated privacy fence along with a huge 20ft deck. Thanks for the tips!
meryl rose says
We are VERY lucky that building fences here is relatively simple because we have no frost line. Now, building structures to withstand earthquakes…that's not so fun
Dave says
Informative post! The description you gave is very easy to understand even for a layman like me. I am planning to fence my backyard and garden next week and this post really helped me a lot to figure out the way exactly it will work.