birds4kids
Songster
- May 15, 2015
- 443
- 51
- 101
Warning, I am long winded.
I live in a sort of rural area of north east Wisconsin, in 4 years I have seen, heard, of had pictures of fox, racoons, possum, skunk, owls, various hawks especially redtails and a cooper's hawk are around constantly. Neighbor had a roadkill deer in his woodline completely scavenged in under a week so I am pretty sure that there are coyotes which only makes sense with all the things we know are here. On rare occasions bear and wolf have been credibly spotted nearby.
I have just under an acre so the tractor will be near the house and in the open for the most part, no large wooded areas too close but lots of small patches and narrow woodlines.
I want to take a proactive approach to predator protection but want to let the girls scratch all over the yard in a tractor. I want open bottom for best access to the ground for them.
My plan is to just go ahead and put a DC fencer on the tractor from day one. Tractor will be on thick grass on heavy clay so I am hoping that affords some modest dig protection at least long enough for the perspective predator to touch the fence and get scared off.
Would like ideas for baiting the fence.
Being a tractor I was thinking of stringing the ground wire in parallel with the hot rather than or maybe in conjunction with a ground rod, concerned about the effectiveness of a ground rod if I am constantly moving it and it will be hard to repeatedly drive deep enough. Thoughts? Tips for how to run the wire, standoff distance? Distance between wires etc.
The chickens are pets as much as anything else so I am planning to pend some money to protect them. The fencer I am looking at is the Red Snap'r 44C. Run on car and marine deep cycle batteries I have a couple of so I can charge and swap. Hoping this is hot enough to do the job, I will buy the aluminum or copper wire, weeds shouldn't be an issue unless you tell me to mount the wire 3" from the ground.
Can I make the hardware cloth the ground? If the chickens touch that but have no access to the hot wire that would be fine right?
Just kind of throwing ideas out, please tell me where I am headed right and wrong. Other than hardware cloth everywhere but the floor what other measures should I take? The red blinking lights good?
I will probably do an automatic door eventually for an additional layer of security and weather protection come winter but not right away.
Last summer I took permanent measures against the 7racoons that decimated my sweet corn but would rather let the predators be. If I can scare them off but still let them be around for the kids to see I prefer that. Not that I can't take permanent measures I have hunted and fur trapped over the years. Just that these days I really enjoy being able to yell for the kids to come look out the window and for example see a fox sniffing around the garden or a redtail scratching at the downspout because it chased a chipmunk up, or some owls "wrestling"
in the treetops.
I live in a sort of rural area of north east Wisconsin, in 4 years I have seen, heard, of had pictures of fox, racoons, possum, skunk, owls, various hawks especially redtails and a cooper's hawk are around constantly. Neighbor had a roadkill deer in his woodline completely scavenged in under a week so I am pretty sure that there are coyotes which only makes sense with all the things we know are here. On rare occasions bear and wolf have been credibly spotted nearby.
I have just under an acre so the tractor will be near the house and in the open for the most part, no large wooded areas too close but lots of small patches and narrow woodlines.
I want to take a proactive approach to predator protection but want to let the girls scratch all over the yard in a tractor. I want open bottom for best access to the ground for them.
My plan is to just go ahead and put a DC fencer on the tractor from day one. Tractor will be on thick grass on heavy clay so I am hoping that affords some modest dig protection at least long enough for the perspective predator to touch the fence and get scared off.
Would like ideas for baiting the fence.
Being a tractor I was thinking of stringing the ground wire in parallel with the hot rather than or maybe in conjunction with a ground rod, concerned about the effectiveness of a ground rod if I am constantly moving it and it will be hard to repeatedly drive deep enough. Thoughts? Tips for how to run the wire, standoff distance? Distance between wires etc.
The chickens are pets as much as anything else so I am planning to pend some money to protect them. The fencer I am looking at is the Red Snap'r 44C. Run on car and marine deep cycle batteries I have a couple of so I can charge and swap. Hoping this is hot enough to do the job, I will buy the aluminum or copper wire, weeds shouldn't be an issue unless you tell me to mount the wire 3" from the ground.
Can I make the hardware cloth the ground? If the chickens touch that but have no access to the hot wire that would be fine right?
Just kind of throwing ideas out, please tell me where I am headed right and wrong. Other than hardware cloth everywhere but the floor what other measures should I take? The red blinking lights good?
I will probably do an automatic door eventually for an additional layer of security and weather protection come winter but not right away.
Last summer I took permanent measures against the 7racoons that decimated my sweet corn but would rather let the predators be. If I can scare them off but still let them be around for the kids to see I prefer that. Not that I can't take permanent measures I have hunted and fur trapped over the years. Just that these days I really enjoy being able to yell for the kids to come look out the window and for example see a fox sniffing around the garden or a redtail scratching at the downspout because it chased a chipmunk up, or some owls "wrestling"
