lol yea I usually take about a ton of them before finding a decent shot
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so maybe I can get my ds to snap a pic of her standing on me
Height and depth perception is key. I can keep my huge Buff Orps in with a 2 foot fence as long as it does not have a top board. They will however fly up to a 2' roost.Interesting that you can screw up the deers' depth perception. Useful too since shorter fence is also cheaper .
If they don't go in for the apples, I really doubt they will go in for whatever might be in the yard where the chickens will be. The chickens wouldn't leave anything the deer want![]()
T posts for 6' fence? How do you get enough vertical stability? Might be a question for DH![]()
Sandy loam over clay huh? The difference is we have rocks IN clayand this is the barnyard.![]()
Bruce
Height and depth perception is key. I can keep my huge Buff Orps in with a 2 foot fence as long as it does not have a top board. They will however fly up to a 2' roost.
Not fat Bruce, just huge. They do fly up to a roost because they can gauge the height. Some go up to the 4' roosts. It IS a matter of depth perception. Put a rail on top of wire , and over they go. Nothing for them to land on at the top of the wire either, and they know it.2 feet ?? Time for Weight Watchers?
Every one of mine can fly up to a 4' roost, no big deal to fly over a 2' fence. Heck, for some of them it is little more than a hop and a couple of flaps.
Peep (a Cubalaya - known to be flyers) must have had a burr under saddle yesterday, or was in a hurry to lay an egg. My wife said she took off from the back yard, flew around the back of the little barn and hung a hard right when she got to the north end of it. The coop is in the big barn which is ~15' north of the little barn. So we're talking at least 100' of air distance including over a 3' and a 4' fence.
Of course, the girls are only 6 months old. Maybe they won't be as interested in going (or able to go) over fences when they are older. I certainly can't do the things I did when I was their (relative) age![]()
Bruce
Point is, depth perception. Also, with chickens, they don't normally really just fly over a fence. They fly to the top, then jump down to the other side. If they can't perch on the top, they rarely "fly" over it. Having a weed eater line strung 4 inches over a 4' fence keeps all breeds out of my garden. Even the ones that can fly up to the top of the 8' wooden fence on the one side. Could be two things in play with this. One is depth perception and two, they can't perch on it.
Not fat Bruce, just huge. They do fly up to a roost because they can gauge the height. Some go up to the 4' roosts. It IS a matter of depth perception. Put a rail on top of wire , and over they go. Nothing for them to land on at the top of the wire either, and they know it.