Sep 25, 2009 #11 B Bear Foot Farm Crowing 11 Years Mar 31, 2008 5,543 343 288 Grifton NC It's NOT hard to do correctly!
Sep 25, 2009 #12 kathyinmo Nothing In Moderation 15 Years 16 Years May 14, 2009 24,541 385 556 (SW MO) Nevada, Missouri My Coop My Coop Show me, show me, show me how! I'm afraid I will fry my chickens! (or myself!)
Sep 25, 2009 #13 B Bear Foot Farm Crowing 11 Years Mar 31, 2008 5,543 343 288 Grifton NC Just read some of these sites, and you'll figure it out. It's really pretty simple, and you dont need a fancy charger for a small area My fences carry over 8000 volts, and I havent fried a bird yet http://www.google.com/search?complete=1&hl=en&source=hp&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=electric+fence+installation http://www.kencove.com/fence/99_Energizer+Installation_resource.php Last edited: Sep 25, 2009
Just read some of these sites, and you'll figure it out. It's really pretty simple, and you dont need a fancy charger for a small area My fences carry over 8000 volts, and I havent fried a bird yet http://www.google.com/search?complete=1&hl=en&source=hp&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=electric+fence+installation http://www.kencove.com/fence/99_Energizer+Installation_resource.php
Aug 27, 2014 #14 Tsscrapin Hatching 5 Years Apr 20, 2014 3 0 8 Dose anyone know if the bigger openings on the netting is ok? I'm not so worried about keeping the hens in as I am about keeping the critters out. The wider netting will keep a fox out just wondering if there are any potential problems for the hens.
Dose anyone know if the bigger openings on the netting is ok? I'm not so worried about keeping the hens in as I am about keeping the critters out. The wider netting will keep a fox out just wondering if there are any potential problems for the hens.