If you wish to install and electric fence that is one mile in perimeter, and you are charging four strands on the fence, your total fence length is four miles.
Why would you want to do that? It seems perverse to wire them in series.
Livestock class, leakage, vegetation, ground conductivity and wire gauge
all dictate what is possible.
In a prolific growth climate like here in northern NZ there are tradeoffs we make from experience to use with electric fence design and construction along with the livestock class needing control.
Here we have some runs of 3.2mm (8g) out to breakout points where wires then run out as 2.5mm feedlines on pre-existing fence lines and/or to 2 or 3 wire fences with all wires hot !
We target ~4kV furthest from the unit for reliable control of cattle and our longest runs are approaching 2km.
Most NZ electric fence installations use earth/ground return whereas in dry climates a fence for larger stock might only have 3 wires, 2 hot and the middle the ground return. The issue with this layout is stock might already have their head and neck well through before contacting the 2 wires necessary to get a jolt.
I know from decades of livestock farming that a zap at this point normally propels an animal forward as their natural reaction is to run from danger, far more than engaging reverse gear.
As energiser have become more powerful (ours is 40J) their earth fields require more care and several long galv ground pegs to adequately transfer the current to the subsoils and the longer/deeper they go the better.
For some decades my preference has been to use a full 6m/20ft length of 20mm galv pipe, quite easily installed full depth by hand with a water supply on the top end and using an up/down motion for a water hammer effect.
When down this deep the soils are very moist which much improves conduction.