Elizabeth, CO · Family-owned
Horse, ranch and no-climb fencing built for Elizabeth acreage — posts set deep against the open-plains wind and clay, and the Elbert County permit handled for you. Built by Jon & Janessa Lang.
Built for the acreage
Elizabeth isn't a tract of small backyards. Out here the lots are big — measured in acres — and a lot of folks have horses, so the fence has a real job to do. The zoning runs about 2 acres per horse, so the calls we get are for ranch rail, split-rail, and no-climb horse wire, plus corrals and cross-fencing to split a pasture into paddocks.
Fences fail out here in the same few ways: the open-plains wind catches a tall fence and works the posts loose, the clay swells when it's wet and pushes posts up out of the ground, and a hoof gets caught in the wrong kind of wire. We build so yours stands up to the wind and keeps your animals safe.
“These guys are awesome. We had to tear down and move a fence on our farm property and their crew came out, took down the old fence and built the new one in record time. The new fence is beautiful and even the neighbor is happy with it.”
Richard Howerton · Farm fenceBuilt for Elizabeth conditions
Most fence trouble out here comes down to the wind, the clay, or a missed permit. We build for all three.
Elizabeth sits up on the Palmer Divide, out on the open plains, and the wind has nothing to stop it before it hits your fence. A tall run catches it like a sail. We set heavier posts deeper and brace them right, so a hard gust doesn't lay your fence over.
The clay out here swells up when it gets wet, and that's what pushes fence posts up out of the ground and makes a fence lean. We dig the post holes deep, below where the clay moves, and set them in concrete so they stay put for years.
Elizabeth is in Elbert County — not Douglas County. The permit goes through the Elbert County Building office in Kiowa (303-621-3136). If your home is inside the Town of Elizabeth, the town handles it instead (303-646-4166). We figure out which one you need and pull it for you.
Most homes out here run on a well and septic, and those lines can sit right where a fence wants to go. Before we set a single post we get utilities marked and find your well and septic lines — so a post hole never hits a water line or a leach field.
“CEOC did an excellent job on our deer fence. I will hire them again for our projects on our land.”
Steve Coen · Deer fenceWhat we see in Elizabeth fences
After a few hundred Front Range builds, the requests from out here are predictable in the best way. Odds are yours is on this list — and we've already solved it.
By far the most common call out here. The zoning runs about 2 acres per horse, so folks need ranch rail or split-rail that looks the part and holds up — plus corrals and cross-fencing to split a big pasture into paddocks. We build it strong and built to last.
For safe pasture fencing, we run no-climb horse wire — the small woven squares a hoof can't get caught in. It keeps your animals in and predators out, and pairs with a top rail so a horse can see it and won't lean on it.
The open-plains wind and the swelling clay are a bad pair — together they push posts out and tip a fence over. We set heavier posts deep in concrete, below where the clay moves, so a long run stands straight for years out in Sun Country and Ponderosa Park.
Out here the deer walk right onto your land and into the garden. We build taller deer fencing that keeps them out of the beds and the new trees, without making the whole place feel boxed in — the same kind of work Steve Coen hired us for.
A lot of Elizabeth acreage has no HOA at all, so you can build the fence you actually want — the height, the style, the wood. We help you make the most of that freedom. And where there are rules — Independence, Spring Valley Ranch, parts of Gold Creek Valley — we build to fit them.
On acreage the well and septic lines run wherever they run, and a careless post hole can cost you thousands. We locate everything first and lay the fence line out around it — so you get the fence you want without nicking a water line or a leach field.
What Elizabeth neighbors say
Verified Google reviews from real Colorado land — fence work, in their words. The same names come up again and again: Jon, Janessa, and a crew that takes pride in the details.
“These guys are awesome. We had to tear down and move a fence on our farm property and their crew came out, took down the old fence and built the new one in record time. The new fence is beautiful and even the neighbor is happy with it — and that's saying something. Will hire them next time we need work done.”
“CEOC did an excellent job on our deer fence. I will hire them again for our projects on our land.”
“These guys are awesome! We have a real estate company and several investment properties. We use them personally and refer them to our clients for decks, fences, barns and sheds. They're always willing to do what it takes, on time and enthusiastic — and if there's an issue, they go out of their way to make it right.”
Where we build in Elizabeth
From the pines of Ponderosa Park to the equestrian acreage in Sun Country — and the newer master-planned streets too. A few of the areas we work in:
Elizabeth fence questions
Get a free, itemized estimate from the owners — horse fencing, ranch rail, or repair, with the county permit handled. Most Elizabeth homeowners hear back the same day.
Get My Free Estimate or call (720) 712-4058