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"Reverse"Apron

Dnar

In the Brooder
Mar 8, 2022
8
11
36
Houston, TX
I would like to make a portion of my property's fencing more secure after a recent incident with a fox. Since 3 out of the 4 sides are on the property line, I'm unable to add a hardware cloth apron on the outside. Is there any benefit to adding 2ft of hardware cloth on the inside? I assume most animals will not want to tunnel 2ft underground to get to the other side of the fence. Is this an inaccurate assumption?
 
I did a reverse apron in my run. I have a chainlink dog kennel, with welded wire around the outside. Babies could fit thru chainlink, so I took the "bad" chicken wire (that keeps chickens in but not predators) and lined inside of run-2 ft up and 2 ft out to keep babies in. It works
 
Foxes tend to go over, not dig under, if they can't go through. They can jump and climb amazingly well. What kind of fencing do you have?
 
Some animals might continue forward that far. Can you dig straight down a foot or 18 inches? It's pretty common to do a vertical predator skirt.
I should have mentioned in the original post that fencing spans about 1,000 ft. I actually need to rent a trencher for another project, but trenching underneath an existing fence seems almost impossible due to the trencher "dimensions".
 
Cayenne pepper powder stops diggers. Easy as pouring powder around the fence line. Stays in soil a long time. Has to be reapplied after heavy rains but can't be beat foe ease of use or effectiveness.I make cayenne tincture once a year & can vouch for how bad it burns.
That's a lot of powder for 1000 feet of fencing. Although I wonder if cayenne can help prevent the armadillos from turning my lawn into a minefield.
 

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