![]() ![]() You probably want to go with a 14-inch masonry blade. So I just roll this along on the wheels then? ![]() We certainly do and this will be it, right here. So I need some kind of a saw that will cut through there. I got a ton of tools guys, but I don't have - I've got to cut a slot across the, an asphalt driveway. You can rent a saw from your local tool rental place.Ĭhris, good to meet you. It's not going to get through that though. In our case, we bury over 1000 feet of wire in less than half an hour until - this is one heck of a machine. It cuts a slot into the ground and then lays in the cable all in one operation. The actual cable laying is done with this specialized piece of equipment. These will indicate where the cable is to be buried and will also show the dogs where the fence is during your initial training. Well, with that resolved, our next step is to temporarily mark the fence location with flags. Believe me, they'll have more than enough room. I kind of like the idea of just a perimeter all the way around the outside.īut these dogs are coming from a 1000-square foot New York City apartment. You know, I'm not real sure I want to do the dog legs. Now the backyard is large, so Todd suggests separating it from the front with two sharp bins or dog legs, if you will.Īnd the only way that the dogs can get from one to the other is through the breezeway here if we leave the gate open. As they approach the buried wire, they'll first hear a sound, then feel a mild correction like a static shock that will cause them to turn back. The dogs will wear receivers on their collars. A small wire will be buried in the ground and a radio signal transmitted from it. Well, with the tick question settled, Todd explains how the fence works. If the dogs get ticks, you're going to the vet's. They're more in the woods.įrom where the grass ends and the woods begin.Īll right, so let's just put it like under the tree line right here. Well, the ticks actually will migrate out from the wood line at least five or six feet. Right now, they're talking about where it should go. Something about a fence that won't be seen. ![]() And with all this space to explore, why should we stop at a stone wall? Ron though, says we need to have boundaries, so he's called Todd Brown over. Ah, freedom, wide open spaces, the smell and feel of turf and room to run, run, run. Sometimes it got to be just too much and when we did find grass, ah, it usually wasn't dog-friendly.īut the move here to the country changed all that. Now the view was fine but the outdoor space was a little cramped and we never ventured into the concrete jungle without leashes. The city is where my pal Sammy and I grew up, 22 stories up, to be exact. And if that fence is invisible, I've got to think it makes even better neighbors. Well, they say good fences make good neighbors and I've got to think that's especially true if you've got dogs like I do. ![]()
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