I think it depends on where you live. Here, people aren't allowed to shoot or trap coyotes, so they are very bold and will climb fences, jump over walls, walk right up to the door, eat people's cats and little dogs.
One of my neighbors had a bad experience with welded wire, where a dog chewed apart the welds and killed every chicken in the run. so for the bottom part at least I want woven wire.
Yes mostly turkeys, and chickens
Two rolls of short fences cheaper than the single 8' fencing, for sure, because I have to pay freight to get 8' fencing delivered. Also the 8' fence roll weighs 250 lbs, so I don't know how I would install that even if I had someone to help :eek:
But if there are major problems with stacking...
I already have electric fence but it has to be turned off part of the summer, which is ALWAYS when I have coyote attacks. The ground is rocks and clay, so pretty much impossible to dig unless they go at it for hours and hours (everyone is locked up at night).
6' is OK. I called the local TSC and the guy said that fence is ordered from local suppliers so 7' is not available at my store. Could I put up 6' fence and another 2' of rabbit fence on TOP of that, or is that a dumb idea? I already have tall-enough tposts, but 6' fence just doesn't seem high...
i already bought a bunch of 8' t-posts and some 10' t-posts. somehow it is easy to find tall t-posts but impossible to find tall fence! it's like selling hot dogs in packs of 12 but hot dog buns in packs of 10. makes no sense.
Is deer fence the black plastic stuff? I have electric fence right now but the county says we have to turn it off during fire season so it's basically useless for 4 months out of the year here.
I want to surround my yard with woven wire fence (the heavy stuff) but I can only find it in 48" height (4 feet tall) at Tractor Supply. We're supposed to have at least 7 to 8 feet fence to keep coyotes out. Where do people get taller fences? Can I double up and put one fence on top of another...