If I could give this business negative stars, I would.
These guys were found by my neighbor, who shares the common fence line with me. It became very clear very quickly that no one in this operation had any experience, whatsoever. First off, they couldn't even do the math to properly and evenly spaced the posts. So, the garbage Japanese maple boards that were used were cut to all different lengths without any uniformity. The posts are crooked and lean and some lengths aren't even level (as seen in pictures). The boards are 8' boards and the sections range from 4' to 8'3". Yes, you read that correctly. Therefore, instead of resetting the posts (for the 3rd time), they glued the scrap pieces of the cut boards to the 8' boards that were too short. It's so ridiculous, it's comical. At the end of the fence line, I gained 16" of property because they were too lazy to dig the hole for the last post. They, then, filled that gap with scrap boards that have now fallen off. So, I gained property but, now, I have two corner posts that are 16" apart with a gap between. My yard isn't sealed. I've had to re-secure their ghetto hack job. The fence line was supposed to cascade from 7' to 6' with a single 6" board drop between. The start and finish but because they started in the back, instead of the front, the back section starts at 5' and the front between the houses ends at 7'10". It's absolutely the most visually absurd atrocity of a fence, anyone has ever seen. The flimsy boards are only 1/2" thick so they all bow in the middle. Hunter's idea was to vertically screw a fat galvanized strap down the center of each length to fix the warp gap. Yeah. No. We settled on tacking the stacked boards together with nails with the heads nipped off. That was my idea to anchor the boards without a strap. So far, it's kinda worked but the boards have warped on each side of the nails, subsequently. Most of the screws have fallen out where the boards were secured at the vertical channels on the posts.
Hunter (owner) refused to speak about the job and would never show up while I was there because he didn't want to be challenged. I'd leave for work late to catch him but I'd see his truck drive by but never stop until my car left the driveway. No surprise why.
In the end, Hunter refused to ever speak with me and I involved an attorney. My atty and I settled on initiating a chargeback to my credit card to get my money back. It was never contested.
There are no winners here. After 60+ days for a 70' fence, I have the worst fence, ever, and Hunter made no money. I would've much rather have spent ALL the money for a nice fence instead of looking at a pice of crap until it falls down. I don't believe Hunter is a bad person but I think he'd be better off working in the produce section at Smith's instead of building fences, as he has no experience or skills in the fencing industry. He has no business building fences.
*Pictures were from what I sent to attorney in 2021 when the fence was new. Current pictures would shock you. read more