Fencing Stoke

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Fencing. You will find informative articles about Fencing, including "Anchoring Posts With Concrete". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Stoke that can help answer your questions about Fencing.

Ward Brothers (Forsbrook) Ltd.
01782 388414
Mount Pleasant Cottage
Stoke-On-Trent
A & R Fencing
01782 215419
The Timberyard
Stoke-On-Trent
Almec Fencing Ltd.
01782 838620
6 North Road
Stoke-On-Trent
Landale Fencing Contractors Ltd.
01260 271099
Bog Hall Farm
Congleton
A C Chesters & Son
01538 750006
82-84 High Street
Stoke On Trent
J B Clowes Fencing Contractors
01889 562319
Parkview House
Uttoxeter
A & D Sanders Bros
01782 658669
The Wood Yard
Stoke-On-Trent
Biddulph Fencing
01782 516927
Shepherd Street
Stoke-On-Trent
Hopley Fencing
01270 585510
4 New Street
Crewe
Kitt T C Home Improvements
01538 723171
12 Heath House Lane
Stoke On Trent
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Anchoring Posts With Concrete

Using concrete to anchor posts provides a very solid foundation and will help to make your fence and other garden structures more durable. Concrete will give your structure a much firmer footing than using post spikes would, particularly if working with light soil or areas of high wind, but bear in mind that using concrete will add a couple of days to the overall completion time of the project whilst is sets.

You will need:
- Narrow Spade or Large Trowel
- Spirit Level
- Gravel
- Sand
- Cement
- Wood Preservative (optional)

Digging The Holes

Carefully check and mark out where the holes need to go. Using a narrow spade, dig a hole roughly 100mm wider on all sides than the post (for a 100mm square post, make your hole 300mm square) and at least 600mm deep. To help to stop the bottom of the post rotting over time, paint the part which will be buried with Wood Preservative and let this dry. You should also put a 100mm layer of gravel in the bottom of the hole to aid drainage.

If you are going to need several holes (for fencing posts, etc), measure from the middle of the first hole to required position of the next. Dig this second hole out and repeat until all holes are dug and ready for posts to be inserted. This helps you to avoid wasting concrete.
Concrete Mix

Make up a fairly dry concrete mix using 1 part cement, 2 parts sand and 3 parts aggregate (1:2:3 mix) in a cement mixer, if you have that luxury, or on a board or wheelbarrow if not. Your mix should not be too wet as this will not support the posts whilst it hardens as well as a dryer mix will.

Setting The Posts

Set the post firmly into the hole and hold it upright whilst you shovel in concrete evenly around it. If you have some helping hands to hold the post (or shovel), so much the better. If not you can clamp lengths of wood to the post to act as temporary braces. Be careful to check that the post is upright with your spirit level before and whilst you add the concrete. Aim to leave the su...

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