Wildheartsfarm
In the Brooder
- Jul 3, 2025
- 13
- 3
- 11
Hello, I am designing my chicken area on my small farm, and I'm wondering how gangbusters to go on the 150 feet of perimeter fencing.
It's actually not crazy expensive to go for hardware cloth. If I have a 4-ft high fence, 150 ft. of 1/2 in mesh hardware cloth will cost me $390. By contrast, 150 ft of 5 ft tall 2 in x 3 in welded wire will cost me $115. Those are really my two options as I want to buy local.
For context: We will have an 8x10 coop inside a 30-ft x 40 ft run. I only have a few chickens right now, but we'll probably have up to 15 time and again, with an average flock size of eight or nine. (Right now they are in a smaller mobile coop/chicken tractor and free range when we are out and about during the day, but I'd like to get them in a fenced area so that they can forage whether or not we are home.)
I live in Southern Maine where our predators include foxes, coyotes, raccoons, weasels, hawks, owls, dogs, and the occasional black bear, as well as rats, feral cats, and snakes.
Is hardware cloth just always better? In addition to being more expensive, I imagine it's going to be a lot more trouble for me to install by myself with the t-post fence posts I am using.
Thanks for the help!
It's actually not crazy expensive to go for hardware cloth. If I have a 4-ft high fence, 150 ft. of 1/2 in mesh hardware cloth will cost me $390. By contrast, 150 ft of 5 ft tall 2 in x 3 in welded wire will cost me $115. Those are really my two options as I want to buy local.
For context: We will have an 8x10 coop inside a 30-ft x 40 ft run. I only have a few chickens right now, but we'll probably have up to 15 time and again, with an average flock size of eight or nine. (Right now they are in a smaller mobile coop/chicken tractor and free range when we are out and about during the day, but I'd like to get them in a fenced area so that they can forage whether or not we are home.)
I live in Southern Maine where our predators include foxes, coyotes, raccoons, weasels, hawks, owls, dogs, and the occasional black bear, as well as rats, feral cats, and snakes.
Is hardware cloth just always better? In addition to being more expensive, I imagine it's going to be a lot more trouble for me to install by myself with the t-post fence posts I am using.
Thanks for the help!
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