The Fence
They Tore Down My Fence – So I Made Sure Their Property Ended With Concrete And Steel… They didn’t just cross a line, they erased it. I came home from a week on the coast, sunburned, sandy, still thinking about shrimp tacos and ocean air, and the first thing I noticed wasn’t the house, wasn’t the trees, wasn’t even my dog barking inside. It was the space. Too much space. I could see straight through my backyard and into my neighbor’s patio like someone had ripped a curtain off a stage. My fence was gone. Not damaged, not leaning, gone. Now, to understand why that hit me the way it did, you have to understand what that fence meant. I live just outside a small town in a wooded area, the kind of place where folks wave from their trucks and mind their business at the same time. 10 years ago, I bought three wooded acres at the edge of a gravel road.
Nothing fancy, just quiet. I’d spent most of my 30s in a major city working construction management. Long hours, traffic, noise, and I promised myself when I turned 40, I’d get somewhere with trees and air I didn’t have to share. In 2016, after two solid years of saving, I built that fence myself, 6 ft high, pressure-treated pine set in concrete footings every 8 ft. It ran the entire perimeter of my property, just under 200 linear feet along the north boundary where my land met the neighboring lot. I dug every post hole by hand with a rented augur that tried to break my wrist more than once. My buddy Caleb came over on weekends to help me set the panels and we drank beer sitting on overturned buckets when we were done. That fence marked more than a boundary line. It was my line. It kept my lab Daisy from wandering. It kept deer from trampling my garden.
