- Thread starter
- #21
No they could not, the entire roof area of the coop is vented all the way around. The hardware cloth is going to have to be cut with cutters, then nailed all the way around. Then part of the coop that was built on over the winter is going to have to be torn away from the coop so the coons cannot climb up. It will take at least 3 hours to do this. My husband works 18 hrs a day as stated in the op. I work, I have 4 children, two of which have to be taken to baseball practice 30 minutes away and the other taken to basketball practice 15 minutes away. I then have to wait for my children 2.5 hours to be done at ptace and drive 45 more minutes to get home, cook their dinner, feed all my animals when I get home from my boys practice, check in on my 86 yr old Alzheimer and heart patient in laws that live in a house on the property with us, clean up my kitchen do a load of laundry (well maybe do a load of laundry but I do need some clean towels) and then lock up the animals...... but thanks for the assumption of 10 minutes I really wish my life was so relaxed as that. On the bright side I did have a really nice person post the recipe for me on here. And it's great that I get a lunch hour where I could run to TSC to pick up supplies. Unless you are volunteering to come and fix up my vents for me? I also stated that I was putting the poison in an empty coop however I don't think you bothered to read my post much. Besides I want the coon gone, I don't care to just lock them out of the coop, I don't want them around period. When I fix the venting it will be to deter other predators these coons are marked for death.I agree. Seems to me those vents could have been covered in a fraction of the time it'd take to figure out a laced bait for the coons...
I'd watch your dogs carefully if you're going with poison...