Farm fence installation on rolling East Tennessee acreage - Loudon County Fence builds horse, livestock, and property-line fencing since 1973
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Farm and Horse Fence Installation in East Tennessee | Loudon County Fence

Out here, a fence is not just a fence. It is a property line. A promise. A day of work that ought to last a lifetime. Loudon County Fence has been building farm, horse, and property-line fencing across East Tennessee since 1973. One acre or one hundred - we build it right the first time.

East Tennessee has red clay soil, rolling terrain, ridgelines, and hollows. We have been installing fences in these conditions since 1973. Every run we build accounts for the ground it sits on - deeper post setting, stronger bracing, and materials chosen to last in this specific climate. We do not use one-size-fits-all methods. We build for the land you

Farm Fence Options for East Tennessee Properties

Not all farm fences are built the same, and not all land calls for the same solution. After 50 years working across East Tennessee, we know that a horse property in Loudon County has different demands than a cattle operation in Meigs County or a hobby farm in Blount County. We build the right fence for your specific land, livestock, and goals.

4-Board Horse Fencing

The classic choice for equestrian properties in East Tennessee. Four-board fencing looks clean, holds up to pressure from horses, and defines boundaries without creating a hazard. We set posts deep into the ground and space boards precisely to match your property layout, terrain, and animal needs. If you run a boarding facility, a breeding operation, or simply keep horses on your land, four-board is the standard for a reason.

Split-Rail Fencing

Split-rail works well for defining property lines and pasture edges on rural land where looks matter as much as containment. It handles uneven terrain and slope changes better than most fence styles, and it fits naturally into the landscape of East Tennessee hills and hollows. A good option when you want something that looks like it belongs on the land.

Livestock and Cattle Fencing

Strength and reliability come first. Depending on what you are containing and what your pasture conditions look like, we use high-tensile wire, woven field fence, board combinations, or barbed wire. We build this type of fence to take a hit and hold. Cattle will test a fence. Ours hold.

Cross-Fencing and Pasture Rotation

Cross-fencing lets you divide your land into manageable sections for rotational grazing, rest periods, and herd control. A pasture that gets grazed continuously degrades. A pasture managed with cross-fencing recovers and stays productive. We design the layout to work with your water sources, gates, and natural terrain features so the system is actually usable day to day.

Wire Field Fencing

High-tensile and woven wire fencing covers large acreage efficiently. It provides a reliable barrier for sheep, goats, cattle, pigs, and other livestock at a lower cost per linear foot than board fencing. For landowners with serious acreage to cover, this is often the most practical solution. We help you pick the right wire gauge, spacing, and corner brace system for your specific conditions.

Farm Gates and Entry Systems

A fence is only as useful as the access points within it. We build and hang farm gates that are sized right, swing correctly, latch reliably, and hold up to years of daily use. Whether you need a single walk-through gate, a wide drive-through entry for equipment, or multiple access points across a cross-fenced property, we build and hang them as part of the job.

What to Expect From a Farm Fence Installation With Loudon County Fence

We start by walking your property with you. We want to see the terrain, understand where your animals are, where you need access, and where the problem areas are before we put a single post in the ground. East Tennessee land is not flat and simple. There are creek crossings, rocky ridgelines, soft low spots, and steep grades that all affect how a fence gets built. We account for all of it.

Post depth matters more on rolling terrain than on flat ground. Corner bracing on sloped sections has to be engineered for the angle and the tension. We do not cut corners on either. We have been setting posts in East Tennessee soil since 1973 and we know what holds and what fails.

We are fully licensed, insured, and bonded. TN Contractor License 54371. Veteran-owned. Family-operated. The same crew that works your farm fence project works commercial and government perimeter security jobs. You get the same standard on every project we take.

How Much Does Farm Fencing Cost in East Tennessee?

Farm fencing costs vary significantly based on fence type, linear footage, terrain difficulty, post spacing, gate count, and materials. A basic wire field fence on flat open ground costs considerably less per foot than four-board horse fencing on a sloped rocky property. We do not quote blind. We walk your land and give you a real number based on what the job actually requires.

Call us at (865) 988-9935 or visit lcfence.com to schedule a free on-site estimate. We serve Knox, Loudon, Roane, Anderson, Blount, Sevier, McMinn, Monroe, Rhea, and Meigs counties.

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