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Agricultural fencing for livestock containment in Central Kansas

Agricultural Fencing in Wichita, KS

Agricultural fencing built for working ground across Reno County and Central Kansas — woven wire, barbed wire, high-tensile, and cross-fencing that keeps stock where it belongs. Free estimates and a 5-year warranty.

Overview

Fencing That Earns Its Keep on Working Ground

A fence on a farm is a tool, not decoration. It has to turn cattle, hold up under a leaning bull, and stay tight through a Kansas winter without a steady stream of repairs eating into your week. River Creek Fence builds agricultural fence around Haven, Hutchinson, and across Reno County with that standard in mind — corners braced to take the strain, wire pulled to spec, and posts set to outlast the loan you took out to buy the herd.

Owner Cody Yoder didn't learn fencing from a manual. He grew up doing the work — stretching wire, splicing breaks at dusk, and figuring out the hard way which shortcuts come back to bite you in February. That hands-on background shows up in the way we read a quarter section: where water cuts across the line, which draw will collect drifts against the fence, and how your grazing plan should shape the layout before a single post goes in the ground.

Whether you run a few head on an acreage outside Hutchinson or manage rotational grazing across several hundred acres of Central Kansas pasture, we build fence that fits the operation. We'll walk the ground with you, talk through how you move stock, and put up a fence that does its job for decades instead of one you're patching every spring.

Ag fence line installed on Kansas farmland
Why River Creek Fence

Why Producers Across Central Kansas Trust Our Fence

Practical layouts, proper bracing, and wire pulled tight by people who have actually run livestock.

Stock Stays Put

Containment built around how your animals actually behave — woven wire for hogs and sheep, barbed or high-tensile for cattle, spaced and tensioned to turn them every time.

Corners Built to Hold

An H-brace or double-H that takes the full pull of a stretched line, because a fence is only as good as the corners anchoring it.

Herd-Law Compliant

Fence built to meet Kansas legal-fence standards so your boundary lines hold up if a neighbor or the county ever asks.

5-Year Warranty

Every agricultural job is backed by our 5-year workmanship warranty — we stand behind the build, not just the bid.

What We Build

Agricultural Fencing for Every Part of the Operation

Containment, division, and access fencing built for farms and ranches across Reno County and Central Kansas.

Woven Wire Fence

Field fence and net wire that holds hogs, sheep, goats, and calves — the tight-mesh choice when nothing can be allowed to slip through.

Barbed Wire Fence

The Kansas standard for cattle. Three to five strands stretched tight on solid corners to define boundaries and turn stock for the long haul.

High-Tensile Fence

Springy, low-maintenance smooth wire that holds its tension across long runs and shrugs off the pressure of a bull leaning into it.

Cross-Fencing

Interior division fence that breaks a pasture into paddocks so you can rotate grazing, rest ground, and stretch your grass further.

Corrals & Working Pens

Heavy pipe and continuous-panel pens and alleys built to handle cattle on sorting and working days without bending or buckling.

Gates & Cattle Guards

Tube gates, bow gates, and access points sized for equipment and laid out where they make moving stock simple and safe.

Built to Last

Built for Kansas Pasture and Kansas Weather

Central Kansas ground doesn't make fencing easy. Summers bake the soil hard as brick, spring storms soak it through, and the freeze-thaw cycle works posts loose if they aren't set right. We dig below the frost line, tamp or set in concrete where the soil calls for it, and tension wire with the seasonal swing in mind so your line stays tight in July and doesn't snap come January.

We also build around the way you graze. Cross-fencing for rotational paddocks, lanes that move cattle without a wreck, and gates hung where you actually need them — sized for a tractor, a stock trailer, or just a four-wheeler checking the herd. The result is infrastructure that makes the operation easier to run, not one more chore on the list.

Agricultural fencing for livestock containment in Central Kansas
What's Included

What Every Agricultural Fence Job Includes

From the first drive across the pasture to the last gate latch, here's what comes standard.

Free on-site walk and grazing-layout consultation
Brush clearing and line preparation along the fence run
Braced corner and end assemblies set to take full tension
Posts set below frost line, spaced for your wire type
Woven wire, barbed wire, or high-tensile pulled to spec
Cross-fences and lanes laid out for rotational grazing
Gates sized and hung for trailers, tractors, and stock
5-year workmanship warranty on the finished fence
The River Creek Difference

Fencing From People Who Have Done the Chores

Based in Haven and serving farms and ranches throughout Reno County and the Wichita area.

Lived the Work

We've run stock and fixed fence in the cold, so we build the kind of line we'd want behind our own cattle.

Know the Herd Law

We build to Kansas legal-fence specs and can talk through boundary and maintenance questions in plain terms.

Local & Dependable

Call and you reach the crew on the ground in Central Kansas — not an out-of-state office that has never seen your pasture.

Free Estimates

We'll drive the property, look at your layout, and give you an honest written quote at no cost and no obligation.

Common Questions

Agricultural Fence Installation FAQ

Under Kansas herd-law standards, a lawful fence is generally a tight three-wire fence with posts set no more than about a rod (roughly 16.5 feet) apart, or an equivalent in woven or other wire. The exact requirements can vary, so we build boundary lines to meet or exceed the legal-fence standard and are happy to walk through how it applies to your property during the estimate.

It comes down to what you're running. Barbed wire is the traditional and cost-effective choice for cattle on perimeter lines. Woven (field) wire is the way to go for hogs, sheep, goats, or anything small enough to slip through barbed wire. High-tensile smooth wire shines on long runs and rotational systems where low maintenance and strong, consistent tension matter most. We'll match the wire to your stock and your ground.

Absolutely — it's some of our favorite work. We lay out interior fences and lanes so you can split a pasture into paddocks, rotate cattle to rest and regrow your grass, and move stock without a fight. A good cross-fencing plan can noticeably stretch how much grazing you get out of the same acres in a Central Kansas season.

It depends on the wire and the terrain. Barbed wire lines typically run posts every 12 to 16.5 feet with stays between, while high-tensile can stretch further between posts thanks to its spring. Corners and ends always get heavy braced assemblies. We set everything below the frost line so the freeze-thaw cycle can't heave a post loose over the winter.

Yes. A straight, tight fence starts with a clean line, so we clear brush and growth along the run and can pull and haul old wire and rotted posts before we set anything new. We'll talk through the scope and what gets hauled off during your free on-site estimate.

Ready to Fence Your Ground the Right Way?

Get a free, no-pressure estimate from a Central Kansas crew that has actually run livestock and built fence in the cold. Call Cody today.

Get a Quote

Request Your Free Estimate

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Contact Details

Prefer to reach out directly? We're here to help.

Phone

(620) 899-5595

Email

codeyoder@icloud.com

Address

Haven, KS 67543

Hours

Open Daily · 8 AM – 6 PM

Service Areas

Haven, Hutchinson, South Hutchinson, Buhler, Nickerson, Yoder, Pretty Prairie, Partridge, Arlington, Plevna, Mount Hope, Burrton, Halstead, Newton, Kingman, Sterling, Lyons, McPherson, Maize, Wichita, Pratt, Stafford