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Thank you!It will be interesting to see what others do. I'm curious too. They can't jump over my fences because I have good heavy duty netting covering the pens to protect the birds from aerial predators. I see plenty of predators on my game cameras. Good luck...
Thank you for this.I haven't gotten around to doing this for my poultry net, but I have baited my horse/llama fence. My fences are electric rope (mostly rope with small embedded wire) so I baited it at the gate where I make gate loops & connectors of solid 14 gauge steel wire so the bait would be sure to have a good electrical connection to the fence.
I used cat food cans (3 or 6 ounces) but tuna etc would work the same - open with a can opener (don't pull the tab) leaving a 1" or so hinge, then use the food but don't wash the can. Bend the sticking-up lid in half and loop it over the wire. Stinky cat/dog food or tuna will attract carnivores, and if you did it right so there's good contact then the whole can is "hot" (you can use your fence tester to confirm that).
I can't say anything about the wildlife, but I saw a definite change in behavior in our dog - after I did this he would not try to go through the 5-strand fence at all!
I got the idea of using cans from the Wellscroft fence people, but decided there was no need to waste the can contents when the empty can was plenty stinky: "6) Bait: Wellscroft highly recommends baiting the fence. Before turning on the fence, hang a partially opened tuna can from the top conductive strand where it intersects a post (to support the weight of the can). Be sure to punch a couple holes in the bottom of the can to allow water to drain. If necessary, place an additional bait cup at an appropriate height for your predators."
https://www.wellscroft.com/support-center/product-support/instructions
Oh, and I didn't do the top strand on my llama fence - I did maybe a foot or 18" from the ground as I was trying to discourage coyotes. I'd bait the top of fence when doing the poultry fence, though, for the bears - and still bait low for the foxes.
So you only baited the gate, but your dog learned to stay away from the whole fence. I’m thinking maybe if I do one bait per side of my fence, maybe that will be enough. I expect predators to come from the back or the two sides, but they easily could come from the front as well.
My fence used to be 3 strands of wire, and it mostly used to keep my chickens in, and obviously didn’t keep coyotes or whatever out. Then a deer or something big ran into it and broke a couple wires and posts. After that, more and more of my chickens started to go through it. Now that I’ve fixed it, and raised it to 5 wires, and upgraded my 5 mile solar charger to a 10 mile one, the chickens are respecting it again.
I think the raccoons are respecting it too, because for a while there before I did the fixes, I was losing birds to what turned out to be raccoons. I scrambled to do the repairs before I went on vacation, and there were no attacks while I was gone. So I think the fence is working even without being baited. But I think when the foxes and coyotes start coming around, I would like to have it baited. I guess a few stinky tuna cans could sit out there and rot all summer and it wouldn’t be a problem.
@Overo Mare , I have heard of the bacon strips method too, but it seems like such a waste of good bacon!
