Grrr! How the heck do you get hardware cloth tacked on straight?!

kristenm1975

Songster
11 Years
Jul 23, 2008
831
18
163
Seattle, WA
Okay, I should be over this by now, but I make chicken tractors for people and get confronted by the bumps, warps and unevenness every time.
he.gif
barnie.gif


How do those of you who choose to use this stuff get it on there straight so that critters aren't just crawling up through all those openings made by the warping? Keep in mind, I'm doing this by myself and don't want to invest in some thousand dollar gizmo.
roll.png


Thanks for any advice!
 

Zahboo

Simply Stated
10 Years
Feb 3, 2009
4,439
45
231
Hope Mills, NC
We unroll it on our driveway, make sure its straight. Have 3 people working on putting it on. One person nailing, one keeping the top pulled tight and another keeping the bottom pulled tight. You can tie one end to a fence to keep tension while you're nailing it down. It takes creativity to find easy fixes
tongue.png
 

kristenm1975

Songster
11 Years
Jul 23, 2008
831
18
163
Seattle, WA
If straight hardware cloth is the sign of a sick mind, I'm extraordinarily healthy.
smile.png


Thanks for the ideas! I like the drywall screws and washers. I may have to give that one a try, since I don't have three people to help me, or a straight driveway to lay it down in.
smile.png
 

Dr.Doorlock

Songster
11 Years
Oct 21, 2008
408
4
131
Garland, Texas
A air compresor and staple gun. As for bending it, I hold it down with rocks until I get a 2x4 on it. I step on the 2x4 while I bend it upward.

Now if I could just do this without leaking a pint of blood out of the scratches on my arms.
 

~*Sweet Cheeks*~

Songster
10 Years
Mar 12, 2009
1,708
12
179
Medford, Oregon
Start out with the hardware cloth cut straight. Wouldn't electric wire cutters be nice? I spent two days zip tieing hardware cloth to the inside of my horse stall turned chicken coop event front bars and door by myself. Kept it straight and tight being the perfectionist.

Good snug fitting leather gloves help to grip the hardware cloth to pull it snug.

24846_inside_coop.jpg
 
Last edited:

consdrs

Songster
11 Years
Apr 4, 2008
343
15
131
Vancouver, WA
I installed some tonight... ugh I hate that stuff and I think the feelings are mutual.
I use fence staples to secure it to the frame but my trick to get it tight and straight... first put it up to frame then tack a roofing nail to the very middle just a little loose. then eyeball the corners to make sure everything is square. if not I reposition it on the nail. when straight nail it in. then in each of the corners put a roofing nail in at an angle so it is going to stretch the cloth as it is driven in. then finish attaching with fencing staples. I hate fencing staples even more than hardware cloth if that is possible...

Connie
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Top Bottom