</font><font color="blue" class="small">( This morning they got a ton of rain )</font>
I got an inch and three-quarters, the yard already needed mowing, and we may get more rain tonight. And Harv, you'd love the fence job I've been working on lately; just in the evenings when the neighbor behind me gets home from work. The old 6' wood fence around his backyard (one side being across the back of my back yard) is supposedly 15 years old and we're in the process of replacing it. He went and bought those 8' ready made cedar panels from Lowe's, which isn't the way I would have done it, but I guess it'll be OK. Now this wood fence has the two and three-eighths OD steel posts, set in concrete, nice and straight for both height and line and all in good shape. The spacing, though, is another matter. Some actually are 96", some as little as 91", and at least one almost 10'. /forums/images/graemlins/crazy.gif I can't imagine what the original fence builder was thinking when he built it. But instead of moving any posts, or splicing the wood (as he did), we've just put in a couple more posts.
Now, instead of letting it weather and turn gray, as they usually do, he wants to spray it with Thompson's Water Seal in the Honey Gold color or something to keep the original "new" look, and I'm amenable to that. The problem is deciding which one to use. They have the Waterproofer Plus Clear Wood Protector, the Waterproofer Plus Tinted Wood Protector, the Advanced Natural Wood Protector, and the Advanced Tinted Wood Protector. The "Advanced" is considerably more expensive and supposed to last longer, but I don't know enough about Thompson's to know whether the Advanced is worth the extra cost.