Kathleen Hugh-Tuza "I love this fencing for the arena!!!! A neighbor has a couple of daughters who bring their horses over to practice before their 4-H shows. Anyway, the other day one of the horses began to act up and backed pretty hard into the fencing Instead of hitting a hard object and being startled, the fence gave a bit and put just enough pressure on its rump so it yielded its hind quarters around and she was able to move the horse forward. No spooked horse, no broken or loose boards. The Flex Fencing just bounced right back into line. Great stuff!!!
I never knew my horses were part Beaver until they stripped the bark off many of our Cedar trees that were in their pasture. Well, the trees began to die so we had a fellow and his crew come in to take the trees out. They used an excavator to grab the trees and pull them out of the ground, roots and all. As the excavator was moving one of the logs into place I cringed as the end of the log was about to hit the fence’s bottom rail. As the log pushed into the rail, the rail turned sideways. When he pulled the log back out to place it on the pile the rail returned to its original position. I turned to the owner of the company and said, 'Did you see that? If that had been a wood board it would have broke and you would have had to replace it.' He said, 'Yeah, that’s neat. We replace many boards sometimes.' That Flex fencing is always surprising me." |
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