We install wood rail, field fence, high-tensile wire, and barbed wire for acreage properties and working ranches in the areas surrounding Boise, including Kuna, Star, Caldwell, and the rural areas east toward Mountain Home.
Three-rail and four-rail wood fencing is the classic look for horse properties and acreage lots around Star, Kuna, and the canyon county border. Cedar and pressure-treated pine are both used, with post spacing typically eight to ten feet apart. Wood rail fencing defines boundaries clearly without obstructing views across open fields, which is important on the large lots that edge the Boise metro on the south and west sides.
For properties with cattle, goats, or sheep, welded wire field fence or high-tensile wire strands are the most practical choice. Field fence with six-inch openings keeps most livestock in and predators out. Post spacing is wider than residential fencing, typically ten to twelve feet, which reduces the cost per linear foot significantly on long runs. We install field fence with wood posts, steel T-posts, or a combination depending on the soil and the livestock pressure the fence needs to handle.
Agricultural perimeter fencing in the Nampa, Caldwell, and Canyon County area often uses two to four strands of barbed wire on wooden posts, which is the most cost-effective way to cover a large property boundary. We install standard agricultural barbed wire configurations and can combine barbed wire with a smooth top strand for areas near public easements where the liability profile of barbed wire is a concern.
$4 to $18 per linear foot installed depending on fence type and post spacing
Post depth for agricultural fence in Idaho is typically one-third of the total post length and at least two feet below grade. In freeze-prone areas, posts need to go below the frost line, which in the Boise area is about eighteen inches at minimum. Corner and end posts require deeper setting and bracing to handle the tension of the fence run.
We can install the physical infrastructure for electric fence runs, including insulated post hardware and charger mounting. The electrical connection to the charger is the property owner's responsibility unless we are coordinating with a licensed electrician on the project. We discuss the full scope at the estimate visit.
Caliche and volcanic basalt rock are common in parts of Canyon County and the southern Treasure Valley. We use tractor-mounted augers and, where rock is too dense, we drive steel T-posts with a hydraulic driver instead of setting concrete footings. The approach depends on what we find at each post location.
Yes. Properties in the Nampa and Caldwell area often have irrigation easements along the edges. We mark easement lines before any post is set and design the fence run to stay outside the easement boundary or include access gates where required by the irrigation district.
We handle fence installation and repair across the Treasure Valley, working in the North End, the Bench, Meridian, Eagle, and out through the western suburbs. We know the local soil conditions, the HOA rules that govern most newer subdivisions, and the materials that hold up best under an Idaho summer. Every job starts with a written quote and ends with a clean site.
Get a free written estimate. Call now and know the full price before any work begins.
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