
Advanced Del Rio Fence serves Comstock, TX and the surrounding Val Verde County ranch land with farm and ranch fencing, chain link, wood fence installation, and fence repair. We make the drive out to the Highway 90 corridor and reply to every inquiry within one business day - 2018 to present.

Most land around Comstock is working ranch country - goat, sheep, and cattle operations that need perimeter fencing rated for both livestock and the rugged Val Verde County terrain. Our farm and ranch fencing is designed for large rural properties, using high-tensile wire and posts set deep enough to anchor in the rocky caliche soil this area is known for.
For residential lots along the Comstock townsite and manufactured homes on rural parcels, galvanized chain link is a low-maintenance choice that holds up to the intense UV exposure and occasional high winds along the Highway 90 corridor. It works well for dog runs, yard enclosures, and garden boundaries on smaller properties.
Pressure-treated cedar posts and pine pickets are common on Comstock residential properties where homeowners want a solid privacy barrier without a large metal structure. Properly sealed wood holds up in this dry climate better than untreated lumber, which the sun dries and cracks within a few seasons.
Ranch fencing around Comstock gets hit hard by deer, livestock, and the occasional flash flood event that runs through the draws near the Pecos River. We repair broken strands, replace damaged posts, and reset leaning line posts before the problem runs to adjacent sections.
Out in far west Texas, an unsecured yard means a dog can disappear fast into open ranch land. We build pet enclosures in Comstock with gap-free bottom rails and proper gate latches that keep dogs contained without relying on underground shock systems that need power or battery maintenance.
Unusual lot shapes, shared property lines, and outbuilding configurations on Comstock rural parcels sometimes require a fence layout that a standard catalog spec does not cover. We survey the site before quoting and design a layout that fits the actual terrain rather than a generic plan.
Comstock sits in one of the driest and most remote stretches of Val Verde County, where the Chihuahuan Desert climate delivers summer temperatures that regularly exceed 100 degrees F, UV exposure that ranks among the highest in Texas, and flash flooding from sudden thunderstorms that hit hard and move fast. The soil is a combination of thin caliche hardpan, limestone rock, and dry clay that presents real digging challenges - a standard post driver bounces off the caliche layer unless the crew is equipped to punch through it. Fencing that does not account for this ground comes loose faster than expected, especially on perimeter lines that span hundreds or thousands of feet across open range.
The property types around Comstock skew heavily toward large rural parcels - ranches, hunting leases, and rural homesteads on several acres or more. Manufactured homes and modest single-family structures on smaller lots make up the residential housing stock in the townsite itself. The ranching operations need heavy-duty perimeter fencing with proper brace assemblies at corners and gates that can handle the traffic of working ranch equipment. The residential lots need practical, low-maintenance materials that hold up through the relentless heat and occasional ice events that hit Val Verde County without warning. Getting both categories right requires different equipment, materials, and planning - a contractor who only does suburban residential work is not set up for the larger jobs out here.
Our crew works throughout Comstock regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect fence contractor work here. The area is defined by the Highway 90 corridor that runs east toward Del Rio and west toward Sanderson - almost every job in Comstock is accessed from this road or from the ranch roads and caliche tracks that branch off into the surrounding range. We know that the ground near the Pecos River lowlands holds more moisture and drains differently from the higher, harder terrain further from the river, which changes the post-setting approach between jobs even a few miles apart.
Comstock is home to Seminole Canyon State Park, one of the most visited natural landmarks in this part of Texas, just a short distance west along Highway 90. The Pecos River High Bridge - a historic railroad crossing over the Pecos River canyon - is another landmark every local knows and uses to orient directions out here. Properties near these landmarks tend to be larger parcels with scenic canyon views and terrain that is more varied than the flat caliche range further from the river.
We serve all of the Comstock area and regularly work in nearby Langtry further west along the canyon country and in Del Rio to the east - same crew, same equipment, and the same understanding of Val Verde County ground conditions.
Reach us by phone or through the contact form and we reply within one business day. For large ranch jobs near Comstock, we need a basic description of the acreage and fence type before scheduling the site visit.
We make the drive to Comstock for the site visit - no charge for the estimate. We probe the soil, walk the line, and identify any caliche or rock obstacles before pricing, so the written number reflects the actual job.
We arrive with the equipment needed for caliche and rocky ground, including pneumatic drivers and concrete for post anchoring. Ranch jobs are scheduled by section so the work moves efficiently across large properties.
When the job is done, we walk the completed fence line with you before leaving. If anything needs adjustment or you notice an issue after we are gone, call us - we stand behind the work.
We serve Comstock and the surrounding Val Verde County ranch land. Call or submit a form and we reply within one business day - no obligation, no pressure.
(830) 488-9050Comstock is a small unincorporated community in Val Verde County, located in far west Texas near the point where the Pecos River meets the Rio Grande. The population is modest - fewer than a few hundred full-time residents - and the surrounding land is open range and ranch country. Most people in Comstock live on large lots or ranch properties, and the community has the feel of a working west Texas crossroads rather than a suburban town. US Highway 90 is the main road through Comstock, connecting it to Del Rio about 40 miles to the east and to Sanderson and the Trans-Pecos to the west.
The defining landmark in this part of Val Verde County is Seminole Canyon State Park, which preserves ancient Native American pictographs and sits just outside the community along Highway 90. The Pecos River High Bridge - a historic railroad span over the deep Pecos River canyon - is another well-known feature of the area that most residents drive past regularly. The housing stock is a mix of modest single-family homes, manufactured homes, and outbuildings on large rural lots. Nearby communities include Langtry to the west along the canyon country and Carta Valley to the north - all part of the same remote stretch of Val Verde County that our crew covers regularly.
Reliable chain link fencing for security, pets, and property boundaries.
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Learn MoreCall today or submit a form to get your written estimate. We reply within one business day and make the drive to Comstock - no job is too remote.