Instead of trying to level the whole area, you can probably make the run fence be level by digging a bit of a trench in the high areas, so the sides sit down into the dirt a little bit in places. You might be able to do the same thing around the edges of the coop, although I might worry about the wood rotting. Maybe put the coop on the spot that is closest to level so you don't have to do as much to it.Here's the coop and run, I'll get pictures of the area in a few minutes. The ground is crazy hard to dig in.... rocks and TREE ROOTS!
I'm in central CT so hot summers, cold winters, average rainfall. We have woods behind the chainlink fence so there's wildlife back there. It's not a lot of wooded area but enough that we've heard coyotes/fox and saw a coyote walking down the street in front of the house last week, so they're around. I have 3 dogs which will keep them away during the day, but once we're all in bed I'm afraid the animals will be making their rounds.View attachment 3847310
If you attach a hardware cloth "apron" to the bottom of the fence and coop all around, and lay that apron outward over the ground, that may deal with the gaps well enough. You do want the hardware cloth to lay flat enough that no predator can easily scoot under the edge of it and crawl in, but staking it down along the outermost edges would probably take care of that.The concern is that if the ground is slightly higher on one side than the other there will be gaps under the fencing. Does it really need to be perfectly flat, or can I fill any gaps or holes with rocks or hardware cloth or other obstructions? I'm off to stare closely at others' photos and set ups but hoping we can ease up a bit on the "perfection" part of the leveling.
Sue
You could dump some dirt onto the low areas, and then put the hardware cloth apron over top of that. That would make it not look so much like it has a gap.