When winter soil turned a beachside build into a moving target
I remember the morning we got called to a new construction site near Jennings Beach after a brutal Fairfield winter. The wind came off the water sharp enough to sting your face, and the ground kept shifting under our boots where freeze-thaw had softened the edges. The crew there had already lost days trying to keep the site controlled while trades moved materials in and out. They needed fencing that would stand up fast, stay put in nasty weather, and keep the job moving without another round of delays. Stakes were high because every lost day pushed the whole schedule further back.
We rolled in with our panels, braces, and the right anchors for the soil we were standing on, then we set the line tight and checked every run before we left. Sal keeps us focused on the details because loose corners and shaky gates turn into headaches once the weather turns again. We got the perimeter secured, the access points cleaned up, and the site ready for the next crews without more babysitting. The builder could finally work with a fenced site that held its shape, and the project stopped bleeding time to the weather.
You got the fence up clean, and we finally stopped fighting the weather every morning.
Project Manager, Jennings Beach

