Last edited:
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
sounds just like my Husband.I need to learn some basic carpenter skills.I did get a cordless drill for Christmas.and boy that has come in handy.I was looking at a small skill saw.and was told YOU DON'T NEED THAT.When he sees me heading off to the coop.with wire.hammer and what ever else I think I may need.He comes a running.And asking me what are you doing.Than I hear I'll do that,In a irritating voice.HE does P~~~s me off.
DONE.........................!!Ok...........so no one told me how heavy a reciprocating saw is and how hard it is to use!! I only have 3 more post to trim (the tops)....have done 7 ! I can mark them all day long and since I am standing on top of a ladder and having to cradle that thing in my arm.....I don't have a single level top...already thinking thru how to go back to get that right.! But WOW !!!! I had to quit for a few minutes and then I have to go finish before dh gets home at lunch or he will kill me! LOL Talk to you all later!!
It's a 7mm (~1/4 inch) metal mesh, used mainly on houses for rodent and insect proofing in breathing vents. The mesh is about 20cm (8") wide.
We used the cheap 6-ft bamboo stakes (bought them completely out at 99 Cents store) and my DH brought home a roll of Starbuck's paper cups and I used those instead of heavier flower pots to hold up our bird netting. We had to use 2x3's to hold the netting down at ground level because the smart wild birds go under the netting and fly around in the garden. The boards have to completely anchor the netting on the ground or else the birds find openings to get inside the netting.
BTW - it doesn't keep rodents like mice or rats out - they chew right through the bird netting like butter!
So basically it behaves like the 1/2 inch or 1/4 inch hardwires we've been discussing on these posts? Except of course 1/4 inch is lighterweight.
I can't afford a store bought coop lol...
Some few people are talented at scavenging and coming out with great ideas and you are definitely one of them!Hahaha. I always build alone and probably build two structures by the time I'm done bec of redoing!! Lol. Part of the fun is figuring out how to overcome a problem. On my latest, the little blocks with stars are bec I cut the big posts on each side of the door too short. I cut 2 squares of about 2" to make up the difference, but it didn't look very good, so I bought the star squares from Lowe's to cover it up and I love how it came out. lol there were many such changes. So fun.
I think we all have been married too longsounds just like my Husband.I need to learn some basic carpenter skills.I did get a cordless drill for Christmas.and boy that has come in handy.I was looking at a small skill saw.and was told YOU DON'T NEED THAT.When he sees me heading off to the coop.with wire.hammer and what ever else I think I may need.He comes a running.And asking me what are you doing.Than I hear I'll do that,In a irritating voice.HE does P~~~s me off.
I bought a custom-built coop in a feed store built by a private seller and the perch in it was stationary and we can't remove it. The little 4x6 coop had a lot of nifty design features but he used all cheap OSB planks, cheap one-inch poultry wire, and 2x2 strip for a perch AT THE SAME LEVEL as the nesting boxes so obviously a person who was handy at carpentering but cheap on materials and didn't know a whole lot about chickens. Still we are protecting it from the weather and it is serving well enough with a pop-up canopy over it for added protection. Can't wait for our home mortgage to be paid off next year so we can get the chickens a good quality home of their own. I absolutely love the pine board and batten Amish coops but our SoCal weather is way too hot for that much enclosure. Maybe we can use one of our house contractor's handymen to build us a custom coop so we don't have to pay shipping on an Amish. I can dream, can't I?