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625 sq feet.
Approx. 408.4 feet.
The garden has to be 36-ft by 39-ft. 150-ft of fence will just enclose it, and the area is 1,404 square feet. If the length didn't have to be 3-ft more than the width, then he could make it 37.5-ft square. The same 150-ft of fence would enclose it, but the area would be 1,406.5 square feet ... a full 0.16%, or 2.5 square feet, more.
The maximum area that you can enclose with 3000 feet of fencing would be a circle of radius 477.46 feet. This circle would have an area of 716197.2 square feet which is 16.442 acres. The minimum area that you can enclose is infinitesimally small - go for a very, very long and very, very narrow area.
An acre is 66 feet by 660 feet so 1,452 feet of fence would surround an acre.
88 feet? unless you add a Gate? 3 foot or 4 foot Which would require 85 or 84 feet of fence
i need help
625 sq feet.
256
46 feet of fence. Add all the sides together.
The garden has to be 36-ft by 39-ft. 150-ft of fence will just enclose it, and the area is 1,404 square feet. If the length didn't have to be 3-ft more than the width, then he could make it 37.5-ft square. The same 150-ft of fence would enclose it, but the area would be 1,406.5 square feet ... a full 0.16%, or 2.5 square feet, more.
Approx. 408.4 feet.
The maximum area that you can enclose with 3000 feet of fencing would be a circle of radius 477.46 feet. This circle would have an area of 716197.2 square feet which is 16.442 acres. The minimum area that you can enclose is infinitesimally small - go for a very, very long and very, very narrow area.
101
Specifying the area inside the fence doesn't tell you the dimensions, and the length of fence needed to enclose it (the perimeter) depends on the shape. -- The minimum fence that can enclose 1 acre is 740 feet (73 fence posts), around a circle with a diameter of 236 feet. -- The minimum fence that can enclose 1 acre with straight sides is 834 feet (83 fence posts), around a square with 208.7-foot sides. -- If it has straight sides but it's rectangular (not square), then the bigger the difference is between the length and width, the more fence (and posts) you need. For example, if the pasture is 6-ft wide and 7,260-ft long, it's exactly one acre, the horses have to stand in single-file while they graze, and it takes 14,532 feet of fence (1,453 fence posts) to enclose it.
There are 3.14159 (or π or pi) diameters in any circle. The "136 feet of fence in a circle" describes the circumference of the circle. The relationship of the circumference to the diameter (feet across) is pi, or 3.1415. So there are 136/3.1415 = a little under 43.3 feet in the diameter.
You can't tell the linear dimensions from the area. There are an infinite number of shapes that all enclose 40 acres but have different linear dimensions. The smallest possible straight dimensions that can enclose 40 acres occur if the field is square. Each side would be 1,320 feet, and you'd need exactly 1 mile of fence to enclose it. But if some developer owned a rectangular piece of land that was 330-ft wide and 1 mile long, his land would also measure 40 acres, but it would take 2-1/4 miles of fence to enclose it.