For 2 metre solid fences it’s recommended to use concrete posts to support each panel. For smaller 1 metre fences or for picket fences with gaps between each timber piece you can use timber posts. A fencing contractor will be able to advise you on the best materials from the length and requirements of a new fence.
Llanymynech
Llanymynech is a village straddling the boundary in between Montgomeryshire/Powys, Wales, and Shropshire, England, regarding 9 miles (14 km) north of the Welsh town of Welshpool. The name is Welsh for "Church of the Monks". The village is on the financial institutions of the river Vyrnwy, and the Montgomery Canal goes through it. The boundary competes the most part along the frontages of the buildings on the east (English) side of the village's main street, with the eastern fifty percent of the town in England and also the western fifty percent in Wales. The Church of England parish church of St Agatha lies simply in England, although the entire town depends on the exact same ecclesiastical church. The border likewise passed right through the now shut Lion bar, which had 2 bars in Shropshire and one in Montgomeryshire. At one time Welsh counties were described as "wet" or "completely dry" depending on whether people could drink in clubs on Sundays. When Montgomeryshire was completely dry it was legal to consume alcohol on Sundays in both English bars of the Lion but not the Welsh bar. 2 of the remaining open clubs in the village are totally in England as well as the 3rd is totally in Wales. Just to the north of the town is Pant. Additional north is the English market community of Oswestry. The English part of the town is in the civil church of Llanymynech and also Pant, and in the selecting ward of Llanymynech in Shropshire. This ward had a population at the 2011 census of 3,988.