



Some jobs don't wait for perfect weather. We've been pushing through on this pipe fence and entryway build, and even with rain moving in, the work keeps moving forward. That's just part of doing this kind of work in the field - you read the weather, you plan around it, and you stay on schedule.
Here's where we're at: the pipe fence runs are in, the posts are set and plumb, and the gate panels are hung. What's left is the overhead - the top arch or header that ties the entryway together - and the final gates. Those last pieces are what take a functional fence line and turn it into a proper entry that looks like it belongs on the property.
The post work on a build like this matters more than most people realize. Getting the anchor posts set right - deep enough, plumb, and solid - is what determines whether the gates swing true for years or start sagging after the first season. We don't cut corners on that part. The overhead tie-in also has to be fabricated and fitted carefully, especially on an entryway where the visual result is the first thing anyone sees coming onto the property.
Our truck-mounted welder goes everywhere we go. That means we're not hauling panels back to a shop and waiting - we're fitting, cutting, and welding on-site so every piece works with the actual ground conditions, not just what looked good on paper. It keeps the work tight and the timeline moving.
Pipe fencing built right is low maintenance, tough, and built to last on working ranches and rural properties. We're close to the finish line on this one, and the final result is going to be solid.