Yes. It clears the fence and hits me.
250 FT. Idiot!!
Just barely. You can get some breathing room by making the area circular. If you do that,then you only need 247-ft of fence to enclose it. But if it has straight sides, then theabsolute minimum fence to enclose it is 278.57 ft. (rounded)
160post at 20 ft. apart
Calculate the perimeter then multiply by 3.5. Don't want to give you the full answer.
500 ft
Specifying the area inside the fence doesn't tell you the dimensions, and the length of fence needed to enclose it (the perimeter) depends on the shape. -- The minimum fence that can enclose 1 acre is 740 feet (73 fence posts), around a circle with a diameter of 236 feet. -- The minimum fence that can enclose 1 acre with straight sides is 834 feet (83 fence posts), around a square with 208.7-foot sides. -- If it has straight sides but it's rectangular (not square), then the bigger the difference is between the length and width, the more fence (and posts) you need. For example, if the pasture is 6-ft wide and 7,260-ft long, it's exactly one acre, the horses have to stand in single-file while they graze, and it takes 14,532 feet of fence (1,453 fence posts) to enclose it.
If you were to fence an area that was 45 ft x 80 ft, you'd need approximately 3600 ft².
1000
There are two sides each of 109 ft and 53 ft making a total of 324 feet of fence. 324 ft /10 ft = 32.4 sections. since you can only buy whole sections this is 33 sections. 33 sections times $8 is $264.
60 acres is 9013 ft. in square pasture
Fully loaded the C-130 can fly at 23,000 ft, empty it can fly at 33,000 ft.