Good Fences Make Good Neighbors-
They didn't build triangular fences. The colonial town was in the shape of a box with the houses around a central green or square. There were no fences.
Chain linked fences are generally five times stronger then wood. However, they are more expensive and harder to build. And it also depends on the design of these fences.
Yes, with a lot of tooth picks and a few bottles of glue you can make fences out of toothpicks. However, you may want to build a little house to put your fences around so they won't just be random fences.
The Eastern Woodland peoples did not typically build fences around their houses. Their dwellings, such as longhouses and wigwams, were often situated in communal areas and were designed for practicality rather than fortification. Instead of fences, they relied on natural barriers and their understanding of the landscape for protection and resource management. Social structures and community practices were more significant for their safety and organization than physical barriers.
Kinda-sorta, but not really. It's possible to disrupt the snow cover to set off smaller, less dangerous avalanches to prevent the build up to the big, really dangerous ones. It's also possible to build fences to change the build up of snow drifts. Or to build really chunky fences to dissipate the power and speed of an avalanche.
The things that divide us are fences,money,build high walls,nationality,religion,color,gender,greed,middle class and poor class
It depends where you are building.. Where I live licenses are not required to build fences.
PUN
farming,hunting,fieldwork,take care of live stock, and build fences
you build one like a baseball field but with shorter fences. i would go grass instead of dirt though shortly cut
They grow crops horizontally so the rain can get to them, they build fences round their crops and their house so the wind doesn't get it.
1950s read the book people