Fencing for Acreage, Not Just Yards
Once you leave Ludington city limits, fence projects change character. Instead of 150 feet of backyard, it's a quarter mile of pasture edge. Instead of privacy, the job is keeping a 1,200-pound animal on the correct side of a wire — or keeping deer out of a young orchard. The materials, the bracing, and the economics are completely different, and so is the experience needed to do it right.
We install and repair agricultural fencing throughout rural Mason County — Amber, Riverton, Custer, Sherman, Free Soil, and Grant townships and beyond — for horses, cattle, sheep, goats, poultry runs, gardens, and orchards.
Farm Fence Types We Build
- High-tensile wire (smooth): The modern workhorse for cattle and large pasture. Five to eight strands of 12.5-gauge high-tensile wire on treated posts, often electrified. Extremely low cost per foot, handles long runs, and stays tight for decades when the corner braces are built correctly.
- Woven wire (field fence): A mesh of horizontal and vertical wires — the right answer for sheep, goats, and mixed livestock, and the base layer for predator-resistant enclosures. Often topped with a strand of barbed or electric wire.
- Horse fence: No-climb woven wire (2″×4″ mesh), board fence, or flex rail. Horses are the animals most likely to hurt themselves on fence, so we avoid barbed wire entirely for equine work and spec visible, smooth-surfaced options.
- Board / post-and-rail: Three- or four-board treated fence for paddocks, arenas, and frontage where looks matter. The classic farm face along the road.
- Split rail: Rustic two- or three-rail cedar for property lines, driveways, and hobby farms — often paired with welded wire backing to contain dogs.
- Barbed wire: Still the standard for cattle on large acreage; typically 4–5 strands on steel T-posts with treated wood corners.
- Garden & deer fencing: Tall woven or poly mesh for orchards, gardens, and food plots — the deer pressure in Mason County is not a rumor.
What Agricultural Fencing Costs
Farm fence is priced by the foot like any other, but the ranges are far wider because run lengths and materials vary so much. Typical 2026 installed ranges in West Michigan:
| Fence type | Typical installed range | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| High-tensile (5–8 strand) | $2–$6 per ft | Cattle, large pasture |
| Barbed wire (4–5 strand) | $2–$5 per ft | Cattle on acreage |
| Woven wire field fence | $4–$10 per ft | Sheep, goats, mixed stock |
| No-climb horse mesh | $6–$12 per ft | Horses, paddocks |
| Split rail (2–3 rail cedar) | $15–$25 per ft | Boundaries, hobby farms |
| Board fence (3–4 board) | $15–$30 per ft | Horse paddocks, frontage |
Long runs bring the per-foot price down; gates, corners, water crossings, and heavy brush bring it up. Free on-site estimates for any acreage.
On a per-project basis: fencing a 5-acre square pasture (about 1,870 linear feet) in high-tensile typically lands in the $4,000–$10,000 range, where the same perimeter in board fence would be a $30,000+ project. Matching the material to the animal and the budget is most of the job — it's the first conversation we'll have.
Sandy Soil, Corners & Why Bracing Is Everything
Every wire fence — high-tensile, woven, barbed — is a tension system. The wire is only as tight as the corner and end assemblies holding it, and this is where Mason County's sandy soil bites. A corner post that would hold fine in clay will slowly lean and let a quarter mile of wire go slack here.
- H-brace assemblies at corners, ends, and gates — properly sized treated posts, driven or set deep, with diagonal brace wire. This is 80% of what separates a 30-year fence from a 5-year fence.
- Extra depth in sand — post embedment increased beyond the standard because loose soil offers less lateral resistance.
- Line posts matched to the fence — treated wood or steel T-posts at spacing appropriate for the wire type and terrain.
- Wildlife and snow load considered — deer strikes and drifting snow are the two things that actually take rural fences down around here.
Property Lines & Michigan Fence Law on Acreage
Boundary fences matter more in the country, where a fence line can run a quarter mile between neighbors. Michigan has had a line-fence law on the books since the 1800s — historically, adjoining rural landowners shared responsibility for boundary ("partition") fences, and townships can still appoint fence viewers to settle disputes. In practice today: talk to your neighbor before building on a shared line, get the boundary right (a survey is cheap compared to moving half a mile of fence), and keep the fence maintained. We build to the line you and your survey establish, and we're glad to walk it with you at the estimate.
Zoning permits for agricultural fencing are generally lighter-touch than residential — genuinely agricultural fences are often exempt in rural townships — but rules vary by township, and anything near a road right-of-way needs care. We'll flag what applies before we start. MISS DIG 811 gets called on every job; buried lines cross more farmland than people think.
Maintenance & Repairs
- Walk your lines each spring — frost, deer, and falling limbs do their work in winter.
- Re-tension high-tensile wire as needed; with proper in-line strainers it's a minutes-long job, and we can service it.
- Check energizers and grounding on electric fence before turnout season.
- Fix leaning braces early — a brace that's started to move only gets worse under load.
We also handle storm damage, stretched-out woven wire, broken rails, and gate rehangs on existing farm fence — see fence repair.
Farm Fencing Questions
Do you fence small hobby farms?
Yes — a two-horse paddock or a chicken run is a normal job for us, not a nuisance. Small acreage projects around Scottville, Fountain, and Free Soil make up a lot of our rural work.
Can you clear brush along the fence line?
Light clearing along the line is usually part of the job and we'll include it in the quote. Heavily overgrown lines or treed fencerows may need separate clearing first — we'll tell you honestly which situation you have.
Electric or not?
For cattle on high-tensile, electrifying one or two strands dramatically improves containment and extends fence life, because animals stop testing it. For horses, a hot top wire keeps them off the fence. We install energizers, grounding, and lightning protection as part of the package.
Have acreage to fence? Call (231) 261-7320 or send the form below. We quote by walking the actual line — free, anywhere in Mason County and the surrounding area.