Exact(2)
Both are acutely aware of the need to make fencing less exclusive, and talk about an initiative called Go Fence, set up by the British Fencing Association, which aims to extend the sport's appeal beyond the narrow worlds of private clubs and fee-paying academies and into state schools: this venture that has already met with success in the London boroughs of Camden and Newham.
In rural areas numerous native tree species were used to make fencing poles.
Similar(58)
During the week, he awoke with the roosters and herded cattle and felled trees to make fences.
A third of the border is fenced, and most of the rest is in areas so remote or rugged as to make fences pointless or impractical.
"Now we use them to make fences" — which in turn reduces the need to cut down trees, thereby reducing soil erosion.
There was little wood to make fences, and privet, which probably came over with the English, was grown as a living fence.
The homes reflect a blend of rugged individualism (Reagan wielded a chainsaw to make fences) and big-city sophistication (L.B.J.'s three-TV setup allowed him to watch all the network news broadcasts simultaneously) that strikes us as presidential.
You can even make fences using marker drawings.
If a child, get a sofa or bed but do not make fences.
Get some paper and put down some glue get some real grass and put on the grass on the glue make fences by using twigs make food and water bowls by using paper bowls.
But what makes fencing exciting is the knowledge that for centuries the violence was real.
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