Storm-damaged jobsite fencing back in place
A hard hailstorm rolled through Euless and left a Midway Park construction site looking beat up by sunrise. The panels were bent, silt had washed under the line, and the wind kept slapping loose material against the laydown area. I remember walking that fence line with wet gravel crunching under my boots and seeing how fast exposed tools and stacked supplies could turn into a bigger mess. The crew needed a clean perimeter before the next delivery showed up, or the whole site would stay vulnerable.
We loaded the trailer with replacement panels, braces, and our post pounder, then reset the damaged run section by section. We re-leveled the line, tightened the corners, and checked the weak spots where wind pressure usually hits first. We do that because a site fence only works when it stands straight and keeps the traffic where it belongs. By the end, the contractor had a solid barrier again, the laydown area stayed protected, and the job could keep moving without that storm hanging over it.
I walked the site after they finished, and it finally felt secure again.
Carlos M.

