Otroligt bra på att lära ut, och så vältalig. Hoppas att denne mannen hamnar i våra historieböcker, och hoppas att min lilla gård som jag inte köpt än, ska få en gärdesgård (jässgåd)
Thank you very much for posting this video. The Estonians have a tradition of making the same type of fencing on there farms. Living in the USA I have never been able to learn how to go about making them. Even though I did not understand the language I now understand how it was made.
Wow, vilken bra video! Jag gillade verkligen att han berättade VARFÖR han gjorde som han gjorde, som en förklaring, det gör det så mycket lättare att förstå anledningen till arbetssättet.
Hi from the friendly forests of Upstate New York! I only speak English, but your video is so well made, I was able to follow along with the visuals. It's interesting seeing how many similarities there are between our environments.
Sir, that was an excellent video and you are a very good teacher and skilled in your craft also. Thank you very much for this tutorial, this summer it is time to build one of the those fences around my farm. Thank you again.
The main points in general are that you chop the bottoms of the uprights in such a way as to give tension when they are placed into the ground and drawn together around the split logs. Keep a consistent number of uprights per diagonal to keep the pattern uniform. Lightly burn the spikes that go into the ground to help preserve the wood from rot. Heat the small soft branches used to tie around, so that they become more pliable. The gist of the technique is to give a half twist to keep the bark on the outside to stop the heat softened and split branch from splitting under the bend.
In North Dakota we have a joke about putting a sign say "long fence" at the middle of a long fence. That way you do not need to walk all the way to the other end to find out if it is a long fence.
I think he's saying "feels tight" but my Swedish is dodgy. The gist of the technique is to give a half twist to keep the bark on the outside to stop the heat softened and split branch from splitting under the bend. The main points in general are that you chop the bottoms of the uprights in such a way as to give tension when they are placed into the ground and drawn together around the split logs. Keep a consistent number of uprights per diagonal to keep the pattern uniform. Lightly burn the spikes that go into the ground to help preserve the wood from rot. Heat the small soft branches used to tie around, so that they become more pliable.