Field Wire Fencing in Ocala, FL
Woven wire and no-climb fencing for livestock containment across Marion County farms. Cost-effective coverage on large acreage. Wood posts or T-posts. Mill-direct materials.
Get a Free Estimate ›The Practical Choice for Mixed Livestock and Large Acreage in Central Florida
Board fencing is the most visible choice on Marion County horse farms. Field wire is the most practical choice on everything else. It covers more ground at lower cost, holds more livestock types, and holds up well in Florida conditions when installed correctly.
Field wire goes by several names. Woven wire. No-climb fence. Field fence. Box wire. The construction is the same: horizontal and vertical wires woven into a grid pattern, available in multiple heights and mesh sizes. The right specification depends on what you need to keep in and what you need to keep out.
Fences R Us has been installing field wire fencing across Marion, Alachua, Citrus, Levy, and Sumter counties since 2003. Manny specs the mesh size, height, and post type based on your terrain and livestock during the site visit.
Field wire is one of several fence types under the Farm & Agricultural Fencing service. For horse property no-climb fence and paddock configurations, see the Equestrian Structures & Fencing page.
Relative comparison for similar acreage in Marion County conditions.
Three Types of Field Wire Fencing Used in Central Florida
The terms get used interchangeably but each has a distinct construction and use case. Here is the breakdown.
Woven Wire (Field Fence)
The classic grid-pattern woven wire fence. Horizontal wires run the length of the fence and are woven with vertical stay wires at regular intervals. Spacing between horizontals is tighter near the bottom to stop smaller animals from pushing through. It widens toward the top.
Available in heights from 26 inches to 72 inches. The most common height for general farm use in Marion County is 48 inches. Mesh openings range from 2x4 inches to 6x6 inches depending on the application.
Best for: cattle, sheep, goats, mixed pasturesNo-Climb Wire (Horse Fence)
No-climb wire uses a uniform 2-inch by 4-inch mesh opening throughout the full height of the fence. The tighter mesh prevents horses from catching a foot in the wire. Foot entanglement is the main safety concern with standard field wire on horse properties.
Available in 48-inch and 60-inch heights. Often installed with a board top rail for visibility and additional strength. The most common wire fence choice on horse properties in Marion County.
Best for: horses, foals, high-value livestockWelded Wire (Hog and Goat Fence)
Welded wire uses spot-welded intersections rather than woven connections. The result is a stiffer panel that holds its shape better under pressure from smaller animals. Common mesh sizes are 2x4 inches for hogs and goats and 4x4 inches for larger livestock.
Welded wire costs slightly more than woven wire but is more rigid and better suited for high-pressure applications. It does not have the graduated spacing of field fence, so the mesh size is uniform from top to bottom.
Best for: hogs, goats, sheep, small animalsField Wire Mesh Sizes and What They Are Used For
Mesh opening size determines what animals can get through the fence. The right mesh depends entirely on what you are containing. Here are the standard specifications used on Marion County farms.
Diagram is illustrative. Actual wire spacing varies by product specification and gauge.
Wood Posts vs T-Posts for Field Wire Fencing
Field wire can be strung on wood posts, steel T-posts, or a combination of both. The right choice depends on your budget, terrain, and the animals you are containing.
| Post Type | Spacing | Lifespan in FL | Relative Cost | Best Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Creosote Wood Post | 10 to 12 ft | 25 to 40 years | Highest | Corners, gates, high-pressure runs |
| Pressure Treated Pine | 10 to 12 ft | 15 to 25 years | Mid | General farm use, line posts |
| Steel T-Post | 8 to 10 ft | 20 to 30 years | Low | Large acreage, budget-focused jobs |
| Combination | Varies | Matches wood post life | Mid-low | Most common setup on Marion County farms |
The combination approach uses wood posts at corners, gates, and ends where strength matters most. T-posts fill in the line between wood posts. This keeps the fence strong at load-bearing points without paying for wood posts across every foot of a large pasture.
Which Field Wire Specification Works for Your Animals
The wrong mesh size wastes money and fails to contain your livestock. Here is the specification Fences R Us uses for each common livestock type in Central Florida.
| Animal | Recommended Mesh | Recommended Height | Post Type | Top Wire Needed? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cattle | 6x6 inch woven wire | 48 inches | Wood or combination | Usually no |
| Horses | 2x4 inch no-climb | 54 to 60 inches | Wood posts | Yes, board top rail |
| Sheep | 4x4 inch woven wire | 48 inches | Wood or T-post | Recommended |
| Goats | 4x4 inch woven wire | 48 to 54 inches | Wood or T-post | Yes, goats climb |
| Hogs | 2x4 inch welded wire | 36 to 48 inches | Wood posts | No |
| Mixed livestock | 2x6 graduated field fence | 48 inches | Combination | Recommended |
Building farm gates for your pasture too? See the Farm Gate Installation page for gate types, widths, and hardware. Gates are quoted as part of a full field wire fence job.
What Affects the Cost of Field Wire Fencing in Ocala
Field wire fencing costs less per linear foot than board fencing on most jobs. The main cost variables are acreage, mesh type, post selection, and the number of gates.
Wire Type and Mesh Size
No-climb wire costs more than standard woven wire. The tighter mesh uses more material per square foot. Welded wire sits between the two. For large acreage where budget matters, standard 6x6 woven wire on T-posts is the most cost-effective option.
Post Selection
Creosote wood posts cost more than T-posts. The combination approach gets you wood post strength at corners and gates without paying for it on every line post. Most Marion County farms use this setup.
Linear Footage
Larger jobs cost less per foot than smaller ones. The mobilization cost spreads over more footage. A 2,000-foot pasture perimeter has a lower per-foot cost than a 500-foot paddock divider using the same materials.
Gates
Every gate adds to the total cost. Gate posts require concrete and closer spacing. The gate itself, hardware, and hinges add material cost on top of the post work. A 12-foot double farm gate costs more than a 4-foot walk-through gate.
Terrain
Flat, clear land is the easiest and cheapest to fence. Slopes, standing water, tree roots, and existing fence to remove all add time and labor. Manny walks the property and notes terrain conditions before quoting.
Tension and Bracing
Proper field wire installation requires corner bracing assemblies at every turn and end. Bracing uses more material and takes more time to build right. A fence with no corner bracing will sag within a few seasons as the wire tension pulls the corner posts inward.
Call (352) 266-2849 to schedule a site visit. Manny gives a firm written quote after measuring the property.
Field Wire Fencing Across Five Central Florida Counties
Fences R Us installs field wire fencing for farms and rural properties within roughly one hour of Ocala.
Other Agricultural Fencing Options
Field wire is one of several farm fence types available from Fences R Us. See the full Farm & Agricultural Fencing page for the complete list.
Frequently Asked Questions About Field Wire Fencing in Ocala, FL
Get a Free Field Wire Fencing Estimate
Manny comes out, walks the property, and gives you a written quote. No obligation. Call (352) 266-2849 or use the form below.
