EddieWalker
Epic Contributor
During the summer, it's very, very hard to drive T posts into the ground by hand with a post pounder. During a fit of desperation, and exhaustion, I put a 1 inch, fairly worn out wood auger drill bit into my cordless drill and drilled a hole into the dirt as a pilot hole for the T post. Shockingly, that worked great!!! I don't plan on doing it for the fence going around all of my land, but for a dozen T posts that I needed done right away inside my garden area to separate the dogs when one went into heat, it worked fantastic.
I also learned several years ago when I was given 4 horse instead of the 2 that I was planning on, and then one of them turned out to be pregnant and had her baby several days after she arrived, that driving T posts in winter when the ground is moist from the rains makes a huge difference in how easy they go in. I fenced 6 acres in one weekend and was more tired from carrying everything around then I was for driving all those T posts by hand.
I also learned several years ago when I was given 4 horse instead of the 2 that I was planning on, and then one of them turned out to be pregnant and had her baby several days after she arrived, that driving T posts in winter when the ground is moist from the rains makes a huge difference in how easy they go in. I fenced 6 acres in one weekend and was more tired from carrying everything around then I was for driving all those T posts by hand.