Hang up on the outside of the shed. all fencing materials are stored outside before you buy them anyways.
skark_burmer
The only other option is to lay them flat. You can stack a lot more that way, but…. Yeah good luck with that.
Maybe use them or just toss the old less worthy pieces
fernweh12
We utilize the ceiling (rafters?) in our pole barn
Mississippihermit
Hang them up high
Far-Pollution-7291
It’s always useful for so many things, the question is by you? When? Any chance you could help a neighbor in need and barter them for something you need for a current project? There really is no better way than what you’ve got now unless you go super creative with a vertical storage pulley. Loft them by roll on a pulley between the trusses of the pole building you have there.
Choosemyusername
Make something out of them. A loft for storage on some rafters, an animal cage, a gabion for some build or earthworks, a compost bin, a trellis for the garden, a substrate for a cement sculpture, use your imagination about what else could be built. let your trash heap inspire you, and you will save a ton of money. Keep a few pieces for patches. I put large overhangs on all of my buildings to store stuff like this outside where it needs a bit of shelter to not rust or rot, but isn’t really worth a lot so not worth using up inside space.
6 Comments
Hang up on the outside of the shed. all fencing materials are stored outside before you buy them anyways.
The only other option is to lay them flat. You can stack a lot more that way, but…. Yeah good luck with that.
Maybe use them or just toss the old less worthy pieces
We utilize the ceiling (rafters?) in our pole barn
Hang them up high
It’s always useful for so many things, the question is by you? When? Any chance you could help a neighbor in need and barter them for something you need for a current project? There really is no better way than what you’ve got now unless you go super creative with a vertical storage pulley. Loft them by roll on a pulley between the trusses of the pole building you have there.
Make something out of them. A loft for storage on some rafters, an animal cage, a gabion for some build or earthworks, a compost bin, a trellis for the garden, a substrate for a cement sculpture, use your imagination about what else could be built. let your trash heap inspire you, and you will save a ton of money. Keep a few pieces for patches. I put large overhangs on all of my buildings to store stuff like this outside where it needs a bit of shelter to not rust or rot, but isn’t really worth a lot so not worth using up inside space.