After Hurricane Charley, we learned real quick that a fence isn’t “secure” just because it’s standing at the start of the day. In Bonita Springs, the wind finds weak spots along open lots, around the Imperial River, and through newer 1980–2000-era developments where there isn’t much shelter. We set temporary fence for wind load the same way we’d build it on one of our roughest jobs: heavier bases, tighter panel ties, smarter spacing, and eyes on the exposure. For jobs near
Serrano and
Imperial Harbor, we watch the gust pattern and reinforce the runs that take the worst hits.
- We check soil, surface, and room for ballast before we unload.
- We use brace points where the fence line catches the most wind.
- We keep fence blow-over prevention steps in place because that’s what keeps a jobsite calm when the weather turns.