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There is an appealing simplicity to digging a post hole. A manly occupation, reminiscent of splitting logs. The pure physical exertion of both are drawn back to the Boy Scouts or the YMCA with the belief in good character born from hard physical activity. So why is it that spending an entire day, several days, digging post hole after post hole brings out in us something less than character? Something closer to the sing song string of four letter words wailed out to the neighborhood in anger and frustration while struggling with thick sticky clay or webs of tree roots or chunks of shale and rock or, God forbid, that hollow clink of having cracked the ceramic housing of the main water line. |
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Fence Height |
Post Depth |
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7-ft |
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42" |
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6-ft |
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36" |
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5-ft |
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32" |
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4-ft |
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24" |
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3-ft |
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18" |
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* 6x6 posts are suggested for heights beyond 60". |
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In other words, warm fetid climates are more prone to wood rot than temperate climates. To the infestation of bacteria and fungus and an Eco system that brims with insects such as termites--ground and subterranean (as opposed to the drywood variety who colonize within the cellulose of your above-grade framing). And how do you prevent your posts from becoming fodder for such a colony? First, do not use the popular application of a liquid termiticide, carpet-bombing your soil and water-table with the same approach today's AMA takes in treating cancer by bombing the system with radiation and chemotherapy in an end-run toward the survival of the fitness--the cancer or the patient. Your soil will suffer, as will the potable levels of your ground water and every other species contributing to that thriving ecosystem beyond the pesky termite.
Freeze Areas |
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Weatherizing tape is often suggested as an added seal. An insurance, of sorts, furthering Prowell's methodology. Weatherizing tape is commonly used in construction when a wood member is buttressed against a non-wood, non-breathing material such as masonry. It prevents the proliferation of decay in an area without light or air flow. But our posts are not in contact with any masonry or non-breathing material other than the top concrete washer, or cap. A cap that will contract in the dry weather, along with a post that also contracts to create an opening between post and concrete cap that will allow the water and moisture to drain beyond the depth of the cap and into the freer drainage of the pea gravel. Not the case in a home construction where we'll see weatherizing tape employed on the window framing of a stucco-clad veneer. The idea, proffered largely by contractors, is to tape the entire post below grade, and thereby create an impermeable seal from the moisture and thereby protect the post. While in theory it sounds like solid advise, we must realize that weatherizing tape that is not only exposed to the elements, but fully submerged in the ecosystem of the grade, will not last anywhere near as long as that employed within the framing of the house itself. Eventually the sealing adhesive will break down and the tape will loosen its bond with the post and we then have that recipe again of moisture making its way between the post and the tape and having no where to drain, or escape. The decay process is set into overdrive. The same principle applies to retaining walls lined with a moisture barrier between the wood wall and the dirt. Moisture--as in dew or humidity or even rainfall--finds its way between the moisture barrier and the wood and because of a lack of air flow and light, and coupled with warm climates, the decay process is actually expedited. Use of the weatherizing tape shown below will shorten the life of your post when the entire post is wrapped. It can provide safe insurance if, as described in the section above, the tape extends only as deep as the washer/cap of concrete (8"+_) Without the weathering tape and by following the primary procedure, your post will still last 40+ years. Far longer than the adhesive life of the tape when buried below grade and in full contact with the soil.
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PREFERRED POST STOCK
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Excellent rot resistance and representing the best option. Clear western cedar is certainly the most visibly pleasing among all choices. Approx. $20+/ft for surfaced 6x6 (5-1/2" x 5-1/2")--. depending on your local lumber yard. Normally a special order in the west of about 1 week. This can often be 2 weeks back east. Seldom a wise choice for an entire fence-line and used primarily to shoulder your Gate, or an assembly of the gate and flanking panels representing a featured entry. Sustain-ably Note: HAWAII *Posts can be a 'green' grade (not kiln-dried) |
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Knotty Western Cedar (STK)
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Equally excellent rot resistance properties and the preferred choice for extended fence-lines. Cedar knotty grade (STK) is approximately 1/2rd the cost of clear and normally with an Architectural Grade of only a few select knots (cedar tree limbs, the source of knots, are sparse and spindly). Sustain-ably harvested in British Columbia. In stock at most yards in the west, and a 2 week special order in the east. |
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Southern Cypress
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Nominal rot resistance. Higher density than cedar or redwood. Sustain-ably harvested only in the SE United States. Available from Texas to Florida, and from Florida to NC. These just happen to represent areas with high humidity and the ideal conditions for breeding bacteria and fungus and although Cypress has the benefit of being harvested locally, it is not an ideal choice in its own backyard. A cypress post in Alabama will host an ecosystem of bacteria within months of being set to grade. |
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Redwoods grow in northern California, where Charles and Ben live. Many of them in his neighborhood are more than 2,000 years old, including perhaps the one sidled along the west wall of the original shop in Sebastopol. Redwood harvests to an acceptably mature fiber in about 150 years. The redwood available today is harvested in 30 year cycles with the result being a porous, fibrous property with excessive sap that is a distant cousin to the fully matured tree. The natural tannins inherent to redwood--it's greatest asset and giving it the resistance to fungus and rot--are a full 70 years away from fully maturing, with the result that it is far more susceptible to bacteria than the redwood of legend. We would suggest that no one use this species for anything whatsoever beyond the appreciation of their forested existence. |
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Clear All-Heart Surfaced Redwood |
Clear all-heart surfaced redwood suffers from the same premature harvesting faults as described above. The difference is that it is clear of knots. An even greater offense. At one time, 30 years ago, clear-all-heart represented the heart of an old-growth tree, with the tightest grain and oldest growth rings reminiscent of the grove where Charles once proposed to his wife--those ancient living Goliaths, alive during the march of Cortez and the Crusades and Caesar's Rome, are mostly gone and their off-spring rarely outlive pubescence. Just forget about redwood Fence Posts |
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You are skeptical of the above assertions on redwood? Take a drive to your local lumber yard and for fun, have a look at the end-grain of a redwood post. Count the growth-rings per inch. Then have a look at the western cedar. Count those. Your proof involves a short drive to the nearest lumber yard. |
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Old Growth Recycled Redwood |
When available, this is an excellent choice. More commonly utilized for other uses than posts, simply because the availability is due to dismantled structures. In other words, you must locate 4x4 or 6x6 dimensions. There are several suppliers dealing in recycled Old growth in California and Oregon, drawn mostly from the dismantling of closing Army and Navy bases. The price varies widely. This is obviously more difficult to secure back east, where such bases were built largely out of local indigenous species. |
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Fiber, or Synthetic Composite Fence Posts are not as structurally rigid as wood, therefore 4x4 fiber posts should not be used for Fences over 4-ft ht. Fiber posts can be finished with solid-body stains or even painted. Unavailable as 6x6. |
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Eastern White Cedar |
Good rot resistance. Not excellent, but good. Available for those in the NE. 4x4 approximately $3/ft linear. Light knots. |
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Eastern Red Cedar |
Moderate rot resistance. Aromatic. Available as 4x4 and 6x6. 6x6 Approximately $4-$6 a foot with light knots. |
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Presuure-Treated Fir or Pfressure-Treated Southern Pine |
Pressure-treated lumber as a Fence Post is a last resort. Unfortunately, because of it's availability and low cost, a common one. |
>>BACK TO SPECIFICATIONS | |||||||||||||||||
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The Designs of Prowell Woodworks are
protected by Patents and Patents Pending.
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