Interesting link!
Tripods - the idea of something to be able to quickly lower the netting in case of an early storm before I put it away for the season came from a post on BYC. The poster had netting permanently attached to their deep-posted permanent wooden fences, but had a central, very tall freestanding pole holding it up in the middle. The netting is just loose enough that when the pole is lowered most of the netting lies flat in the field. Only the edges where it goes up to the fencing is going to catch snow and pull. I looked for it and can't find it, but this poster also does similar on a bigger scale, and it looks great. They're in Ohio
https://www.backyardchickens.com/th...t-from-aerial-predators.1473213/post-24546386
Yes, I remembered it was you that night, sorry!
And yes the welded wire here functions like your links, only your links are probably stronger. I can't picture how to do the doorway gaps with HC that would work against weasels. The coop is great weasel protection for nighttime, however.
I've had a bear inspect and scratch the small coop but leave, and have found raccoon prints on it, all before I got electric poultry netting. Fox and coyote go by but don't linger. But I've had roaming domestic dogs come through, a big reason why I rarely do even supervised free-ranging sessions anymore.
The electric fence kills some toads trying to go through it every year, which is really unfortunate and sad, and I don't know how to fix that. Used to kill just one each Spring and Fall, but this year there have been four killed so far, and we're not into real Fall yet.
I did rescue a medium-sized toad out of a big garter snake's mouth this year. Both were inside the run. The chickens found them and were bokking about it each time the toad thrashed. It was up to it's hip with one leg down the snake's throat. I thought about it and decided to help the toad, since it seemed very much alive and uninjured. I understand about Nature's Way but I don't like it. I decided I didn't have to be a bystander with this right there in our run. I think the slowness of the attempted kill was hard for me to handle. I always want to rescue a hapless small frog the chickens come across when I witness it, but they usually kill it and eat it so quickly I get over it quickly too.
So I gently and very slowly applied pressure to pry the snake's jaws apart being careful of it's teeth, with my fingers between it's "canines", and it suddenly unlocked and let go. The snake left; the toad had just one small spot of blood on its upper leg and I placed it in wet woods 300 feet away beyond the fence.