⛩️ Fencer in Laurencekirk, Aberdeenshire
This one’s up for grabs.
For Fencers
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- Only one Fencer spot in Laurencekirk
- Your business, top of the pile — no ads, no rivals, no noise
- £40/month — cancel anytime
Need a fencer?
Nobody’s stepped up in Laurencekirk yet.
Drop your email — we’ll shout when someone local takes it.
About Fencers
A fencer installs and repairs fences, gates and boundary treatments - from standard timber panels and close-board fencing to post-and-rail, stock fencing and bespoke garden screens.
Scotland's weather puts fences under serious pressure, so proper posts set in concrete and treated timber make the difference between a fence that lasts and one that blows over in the first winter.
Check boundary ownership before commissioning any fence work - your title deeds or the Land Register of Scotland will confirm which boundaries are your responsibility.
About Laurencekirk
Laurencekirk is a small market town in the fertile Howe of the Mearns, roughly twenty miles south of Aberdeen. It grew up as a planned village in the eighteenth century and served as an important stopping point on the road between Aberdeen and Dundee. The town retains a neat, linear layout along its broad main street.
The town has a primary and secondary school, a medical practice and a selection of local shops and services. A railway station reopened in 2009, restoring rail links that had been lost under the Beeching cuts and improving connections to Aberdeen and stations further south.
Surrounded by rich agricultural land, Laurencekirk has a strong rural character. The Howe of the Mearns is the landscape immortalised by Lewis Grassic Gibbon in his classic novel Sunset Song.
About Aberdeenshire
Aberdeenshire is one of the largest council areas in Scotland, wrapping around the city of Aberdeen in a broad arc that stretches from the Cairngorms in the west to the North Sea coast in the east and from the Angus border in the south to the Moray Firth in the north.
The region is extraordinarily varied: Royal Deeside — the valley of the River Dee running west from Aberdeen through Banchory, Aboyne, Ballater and Braemar — is one of Scotland's most celebrated landscapes, closely associated with the royal family through Balmoral Castle. The Donside valley to the north offers a quieter, equally attractive alternative.
The north-east coast has a distinctive character shaped by centuries of fishing, with harbours at Peterhead, Fraserburgh, Macduff and a string of smaller ports that once landed vast quantities of herring and white fish. Peterhead remains one of the busiest fishing ports in Europe and the coastal towns retain a strong working identity.
Inland, the rolling farmland of Buchan, the Garioch and the Mearns supports a productive agricultural economy. Market towns like Inverurie, Ellon, Huntly and Turriff serve as local centres for their surrounding districts and many have grown significantly as commuter settlements for Aberdeen.
The North Sea oil and gas industry transformed the region's economy from the 1970s onward, bringing prosperity and population growth to towns within commuting distance of Aberdeen. That legacy continues in the energy transition, with Aberdeenshire positioning itself at the centre of Scotland's renewable energy future.
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