Stock fencing meeting field gates

Robin2020

Member
Livestock Farmer
Hi all, first post so go easy :)
I'm building a 200m stock fence with wooden posts/strainers/struts etc. I have a 3.3m wooden field gate (with posts) which needs fitting in the middle of the fence line. As the gate is grant aided its posts can't be used as strainers. What is the best/standard way to link my fence to the gate? Put a strainer alongside each gatepost?? I doubt this is ideal as movement of one would effect the other. Space the strainer 1m from the gate post and link them with wooden rails? Space 1m and link with stock fence which wouldn't be highly stressed...??
 

milkloss

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
East Sussex
Have seen a few jobs lately where the strainers have pulled on the gateposts which need resetting. They were done in the wet but the guys that put them in now leave the wire from strainer to gate post stapled slack and tighten it later.
 
Rails between strainer & gate post would be the most popular solution
Never strain to gate posts unless you like string. Interesting that grant aid has got it right.
The best way we have found is to use rails, distance between the posts is your choice but at least a metre.
Nail the rails to the gate post, leave the rails at least 6in long on the strainer, and secure wire loops secured with staples.
That way if your strainer moves the rails can slide and not pull the gate post over.
 

Robin2020

Member
Livestock Farmer
Cheers for the detail organicguy. And the picture thread is excellent. I am 20 pages deep and lots learned!!! Just wishing I had ordered some rails now ..
 

Fendt516profi

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
Yorkshire
Never strain to gate posts unless you like string. Interesting that grant aid has got it right.
The best way we have found is to use rails, distance between the posts is your choice but at least a metre.
Nail the rails to the gate post, leave the rails at least 6in long on the strainer, and secure wire loops secured with staples.
That way if your strainer moves the rails can slide and not pull the gate post over.
I'd put a strainer 6foot away from gate post and a fence post about 1foot away from gate post then fasten rails to strainer and fence post and overlap rail onto face on gate post but not secured to it
 

Lapwing

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Wiltshire
The other handy thing with having rails alongside is that if anyone hits the gatepost, you arent messing around fixing fences too. A decent rail gap also gives scope for widening the gate if you ever need to.
 

Ffermer Bach

Member
Livestock Farmer
how I do it
 

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ARW

Member
Location
Yorkshire
68826B16-2ECE-4FB3-8967-AE5A36E50497.jpeg

after you have pulled the wire and set the gate then rail between the two, we go for 4ft rails lengths for the gap then you get 3x out of a rail, put 5 rails on for lambs, we run the bottom one level with the bottom wire if the net and top rail in between the two barbed wires
If it’s soft ground or wet we knock in a stake next to the strainer then rail from the gate post to the stake and let the rails over lap the strainer
We railed loads of fencing to gate posts 2 years back then when it got very dry in spring everything moved!
 

Bobthebuilder

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
northumberland
Was always taught never to fix straining post to a gate post, always rail off the gap with a couple of posts and some rails, over hanging the strainer so if and when it moves it doesn’t leave a gap to the rails
 

ARW

Member
Location
Yorkshire
Was always taught never to fix straining post to a gate post, always rail off the gap with a couple of posts and some rails, over hanging the strainer so if and when it moves it doesn’t leave a gap to the rails
This is good practice, however if your strainer and strut arrangement is good and strong it shouldn’t move far, and if it’s so soft that it does move then it’s likely that the gate post hanging the gate could also move!
 

Robin2020

Member
Livestock Farmer
Cheers all, lots of options. Nearly got all of my gates in so time to make a decision. .....Not much fun working in this ground!!!!
 

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