Farm & Ranch Fence Installation in Celina, TX
Steel pipe corral, no-climb horse fence, barbed wire perimeter, and high-tensile wire — built for working cattle and equestrian properties across the rural acreage north and west of Celina.
Get a Free Estimate (469) 663-8779Farm & Ranch Fencing in Celina, TX
Farm and ranch fencing is real work. The fence has to contain livestock through every condition the year throws at it — Texas summer heat that bakes the soil hard as concrete, drought followed by spring rains that turn the same ground into expansive blackland clay, and storms that test every section. Celina Fence Builders builds working ranch fence across the rural acreage north and west of Celina — pipe corral, no-climb horse fence, barbed wire perimeter, high-tensile wire, and the gates and braces that make the whole system function. We work daily across Gunter, Weston, Pilot Point, and the equestrian properties between Celina and the Red River.
Pipe Corral and Continuous Fence for Cattle
Heavy-gauge steel pipe is the standard for serious cattle work in Collin County and across North Texas. Two-inch and 2-3/8 inch line pipe with three or four horizontal rails — welded continuously or pinned with sucker-rod connections — handles the kind of pressure that splits wood rails and pushes through smooth wire. Continuous fence is the upgrade for high-density operations, sale barns, sorting pens, and tight working areas where cattle pressure concentrates. Posts go in concrete on corners, braces, and gate sets, with line posts driven or set depending on the stretch. We weld on-site for clean panel-to-post connections and use cold-galvanizing compound on every weld to prevent rust through Texas humidity. Gates are built heavy enough to swing level for years, with proper braces and chain-and-clip latches or panel pin systems sized for the operation.
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No-Climb Horse Fence and Equestrian Perimeters
No-climb mesh — typically 2x4 inch v-mesh in 50 or 60 inch heights — is the standard for equestrian properties around Pilot Point, Aubrey, and the horse country between Celina and the Denton County line. The mesh keeps hooves out and predators out without the hoof-cut risk of standard barbed or smooth wire. We install no-climb on treated wood line posts or steel T-posts, with pipe or pressure-treated wood corners and braces sized to hold the wire tension across long runs. Top rails of pipe or pressure-treated 2x6 are common for visibility and to discourage horses from leaning over the fence. Three- and four-rail vinyl, painted board, and pipe top with no-climb infill are the upgrades for visible front-pasture runs where appearance matters.
Barbed Wire, High-Tensile, and Perimeter Builds
Standard 4 or 5-strand barbed wire on T-posts with treated corners and braces is still the most cost-effective perimeter fence for cattle on larger acreage across Collin County and the surrounding rural areas. We tension wire properly on a Bekaert or comparable stretcher — by hand stretching wire on a pickup hitch leads to loose strands within a season — and we set corner and brace assemblies the way they're meant to go. High-tensile smooth wire — 5, 6, or 8 strands depending on the stock and the perimeter — is the modern alternative for cattle and exotics. Properly tensioned, high-tensile wire moves with impact rather than breaking, lasts longer than barbed in this climate, and the brace assemblies hold tension across the long stretches typical of Collin County ranch work.
Farm & Ranch Installations Across Collin County


Signs Your Ranch Fence Needs Repair or Replacement
Ranch fence fails in predictable ways. Watch for these signs.
Failed or Loose Brace Assemblies
H-braces and corner assemblies are the load-bearing structure of any wire fence — when they shift, lean, or pull out of the ground, the entire wire run goes slack. This is the most common ranch-fence repair call.
Broken or Slack Wire
Snapped strands, slack barbed wire, and sagging high-tensile signal failed splices, broken brace assemblies, or impact damage. Cattle and horses will find any gap.
Rusted or Welded Pipe Failures
Pipe corral that's rusting through at welds or sagging at panel connections usually signals coating failure or weld breakdown — common on older builds without proper cold-galvanizing at the joints.
Sagging or Dragging Gates
Ranch gates take more abuse than any other fence component. Sagging hinges, broken latches, and gates that drag in the dirt are usually fixable without redoing the whole fence — but they need to be fixed before stock find the way through.
How We Install Farm & Ranch Fencing
A straightforward process from estimate to completed perimeter.
Free On-Site Walk
We walk the property line, identify corners and gate locations, assess existing fence to keep or replace, discuss the type of stock and the fence type that fits, and provide a written estimate.
Layout and Material Drop
Property corners confirmed, line cleared as needed, materials dropped on-site, and underground utilities marked through Texas 811 before any digging starts.
Corners, Braces, and Posts
Corner and brace assemblies set first in concrete or with proper anchoring, line posts driven or set on spacing for the stock and the wire type. Welds touched up with cold-galvanizing on pipe builds.
Wire, Mesh, Gates, and Cleanup
Wire stretched to proper tension on a mechanical stretcher, mesh fastened with the right clips and staples, gates hung level with the right hardware for the operation, and the site cleared of debris.
What Our Clients Say
"Cedar board-on-board around the backyard in Light Farms. Crew kept everything tight to the HOA spec and worked through a hot July week without slowing down. Posts are dead plumb and the gates close clean — a year in and nothing has shifted in our blackland clay."
Farm & Ranch Fence Estimates in Celina — Call Today
Contact Celina Fence Builders at (469) 663-8779 for a free estimate on pipe corral, no-climb horse fence, barbed wire, or high-tensile installation in Celina or anywhere across Collin County.