Ausdotte
Chirping
- Jun 26, 2017
- 76
- 65
- 76
I can't take credit for any of it being my idea, my husband built it. 

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Whoa....I like that frame too!!!!!!View attachment 1099632 My hubby built a shed like frame with 2/4s and then We ran welded wire all around it and then chicken wire over the welded wire
I've got !/2 Great Pyrenees 1/2 Komondor pups growing up to do that very thing. Protect everything inside the perimeter fence. We are slowly fencing in 6 acres so they will roam all night and find a shady spot to sleep in the day!I just read every post up to here.
I and a friend covered a yard for a woman.
we used chicken wire over the whole thing.
It was 50 feet by 130 feet.
it was to keep her cats from getting out.
pepers didn't say where he is from.
but poultry netting, ground cover cloth etc are no good where it snows.
I built a 12 x 25 foot fly pen. I put chicken wire over the whole top.
the walls are 1 inch square 10 gage wire.
the walls are 8 feet tall.
I would not use wood rails to hold up the "roor" on a chicken yard. wood rots.
get some heavy wire and stretch it from post to post on the opposite side of the yard.
support it with a post wherever the wires cross. then just lay your chicken wire over it.
tie it down with wire. don't use plastic zip ties,
they will deteriorate from the sun.
make the outside posts plenty tall so that you can walk in the yard without having to duck.
there used to be a fencing, 6 feet tall called yard guard if I remember correctly.
at the bottom it had very tiny rectangular holes. and the rectangles got larger the higher it went. I think it topped out at 2 inch x 3 inch squares at the top.
for my present run, I have 4 feet of cyclone fence with 1 inch chicken wire attached to the bottom 2 feet of it.
I don't worry about preds, I have a pair of Maremma LGD. like in the picture..
we haven't lost a bird in the past 8 years since we got these dogs.
my chickens are free ranging and we do not lock the coop at night.
we have a river running half way around out porperty.
and we have all the preds except mt lions.
although I did see one about 4 miles from my house..
So far you have been lucky. Luck is bound to run out eventually.Why do you pity my chickens? I have no doubts that my chicken wire will protect them from everything but mountain lions and bears. It has already stood up to years of skunks, raccoons, bobcats, multiple dog attacks, and several coyotes and foxes.
The same goes with hardware cloth. And, if that is your logic, then I pity your chickens.So far you have been lucky. Luck is bound to run out eventually.
My coops are enclosed with welded wire and covered with chicken wire. Reasonably secure against the small varmints around here. My runs are enclosed with cyclone fence kennel panels. A straying Malamute tore apart the chain link and killed 26 birds. CHAIN LINK. A serious predator won't even lose speed with chicken wire.I isn't luck, it is simply installing the wire correctly. My chicken wire has stood up to many predators and never broke.
So what is a "serious" predator to you. Are dogs, coyotes, and bobcats not serious predators? How did a dog rip apart your chain link? Did it have proper tension, compression bars, and a bottom wire?My coops are enclosed with welded wire and covered with chicken wire. Reasonably secure against the small varmints around here. My runs are enclosed with cyclone fence kennel panels. A straying Malamute tore apart the chain link and killed 26 birds. CHAIN LINK. A serious predator won't even lose speed with chicken wire.
I'd suggest hardware cloth like everyone else.Your chicken wire may have worked for now and it's true that it is way cheaper (I was even planning on using it for my new run before this thread!), but if/when a predator breaks down your chicken wire and gets in, you'll just be losing your poor chickens, and your chicken wire. In the end, a waste of money on the wire, and (this feels so wrong for me to say!
) on your poor chickens since they could all be wiped out in minutes. They could be fine for 10 more years with chicken wire, but the second a predator really wants one of your chickens and your roo, guinea fowl, or you aren't there to alert you/chase off/kill the predator, you're going to at least lose a couple.
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No wire (including hardware cloth) is completely predator proof. I have had many predators (including raccoons) that couldn't break through the chicken wire. I have had a great experience using chicken wire and it isn't just luck, chicken wire works. Hardware cloth is no different and a predator could still break through it.A raccoon can destroy chicken wire easily and kill your chickens