Equipped with a beak like something evolved in the Mesozoic, the fence pliers are an essential tool in our toolbox. Never lonely for long, they are brought out several times a week. Even on a casual walk in the back forty to hunt rabbit, I’ll make room for a pair in a back pocket: sometimes, even the casual walk entails an unexpected spot of fence repair.
A classic tool designed for multiple uses, the fence pliers have beauty built into their design. The hinged head includes the beak on one side and a flat face on the other. The beak is perfect, using a hammer to strike the opposite face, for digging fence staples out of old wooden posts. The curvature allows the user to rock the pliers against the wood and ease out even the most stubborn of staples.
The toothed jaws are handy for crimping the wire in an old fence line. A crimp every couple of feet will tighten up the most sagging line. And that opposite end to the beak, the flat face, serves as a nifty hammer.
The handles, when pulled apart, expose a guillotine on the head that cuts barbed wire easily … if the user has purchased the correct pair. In the world of fence pliers, a standard cheap pair will cost about $12 and a lifetime of frustration. Splurge a little for a pair made by Diamond and you will thank me.
As our British cousins might say, fence pliers are a dead useful addition to any farm toolbox.
Sounds like the solution to a game of Clue… Mr Plum in the Library with a Fence Pliers.
Ouch!
I had that in mind when captioning the picture. Hope you have a good Thanksgiving.
You too!
Nice post, I’ve been wielding one of those myself a fair bit these past few weeks. A timeless design classic. But funny how language is a lot less timeless than tools – I haven’t heard anyone say ‘dead useful’ on these shores for 10 years or so now, not even in its heartlands of the north! If my kids wanted to express their enthusiasm for such a tool these days they’d tell me that it was ‘sick’. Though persuading them to enthuse about fencing would be a fine thing…
Dang, always behind the curve on the latest linguistic changes. So the kids don’t buy the “character building” aspects of fence repair?