when i put the gate into our property last year i did not brace the 20' span between the original fence line and the gate. i naively assumed that 6" posts buried 40" or so in the ground would resist the tension of 4 strand barbed wire (of the standard 12.5 gauge). wrong again

so this year i've spent the last several days (in actual work, in elapsed time it's more like 4 weeks) in bracing all the corners.
and now, by gum, i got me some tension on the wire. i tried to tighten the fence over that little span twice but to no avail. in a week or so the fence was once again laughably floppy and on one side of the gate the outside 6" post warped at least 4 inches out of true. look at the last post in the line:
it's a little hard to see, but the top is bowed out of line to the right. that post was solidly in line when placed.
Will a close mowing now and then prune back the cactus easier then hand digging? I seem to recall that in N.D. the place that always had cactus was inside the legs of the windmill where the lawn mower couldn't go.
a close mowing might very well help, but i have two problems with that. the first is that i don't have a mower :ashamed:, the second is that my grass is pretty patchy in general and i don't want to expose any more ground to sunlight than i must. that's a useful suggestion though, and i'll file it away. thanks for the tip.
How did the 3pt spreader work for you? I need to spread seed, lime and fertilizer on my reclaimed field eventually.
the spreader operated flawlessly, but i didn't get the coverage i wanted. the problem with it is that you juggle a bunch of variables: 1) ground speed of the tractor, 2) height of the spreader's outlet above ground, 3) pto rotation, and 4) the size of the opening(s) from which the product is dispensed. the height and pto rotation speed are not that hard to set. the spreader comes with a chart correlating ground speed and opening size but i did something wrong because the coverage i achieved was 10 to 20% of what i wanted. i think it will take some practice to get consistent results, so i would recommend some testing with mulch, sand, or something similar until you think you have a handle on the coverage.