Wood & privacy fencing
Cedar and pressure-treated pine, set deep in our clay soil and lined straight by the same crew that's been building wood fence in Rogers for 60+ years. It's the fence most of our neighbors choose, and the one we've built the most of.
The fence most backyards ask for
A wood privacy fence does three jobs at once: it gives you your backyard to yourself, keeps kids and pets where they belong, and looks like it was always meant to be there. We build them in western red cedar and pressure-treated pine, in the heights and styles that suit Northwest Arkansas yards.
- Western red cedar or pressure-treated pine
- Shadowbox — alternating boards that look good from both sides
- Board-on-board — overlapped boards for full privacy, no gaps
- Modern horizontal slat for clean, contemporary lines
- 6 ft, 7 ft, and 8 ft privacy heights
- Steel posts available for added strength and straighter lines
- Matching walk gates and steel-framed drive gates
Cedar privacy fence stepped down a grade — Northwest Arkansas
Why posts matter more than panels here
Northwest Arkansas clay holds water in spring and heaves when it freezes, and a lot of our lots roll instead of lying flat. A wood fence that ignores that leans by its third winter.
So we start in the ground. We set posts to the depth our soil actually needs, and on runs that take wind or carry a gate, we'll recommend steel posts behind the wood face. On slopes we step or rack the panels so the fence follows the grade instead of fighting it — straight along the top, tight to the ground, no awkward gaps under the bottom rail. Cedar takes our humidity well and weathers to a quiet gray; treated pine is the budget-friendly workhorse. We'll tell you straight which one fits your yard.
Picking a style, hanging the gates
Shadowbox is the neighborly pick — it looks finished from both sides, so nobody gets the "back" of the fence. Board-on-board closes every gap for full privacy. Horizontal slat suits newer homes and patios that want a cleaner, modern line.
Whichever style you land on, the gate is where a wood fence earns its keep. Gates take more abuse than any stretch of panel, so we frame them square, hang them on solid posts, and use steel frames where a wide or heavy gate needs them — so it still swings true years from now.
Every estimate is free and happens at your place: we walk the line with you, measure, talk styles and heights, and put a clear written price on it. No pressure either way.
Shadowbox cedar with a matching wood gate
Thinking about a wood fence?
Tell us what you're fencing and we'll come walk the line — cedar or pine, we'll give you a straight answer and a free written estimate.