Reconsidering Taller Protective Cages for Raised Beds
Some of you may remember that I got my raised bed gardens devasted by deer this year. So, I have been making a number of 2-foot-tall pallet wood chicken wire protective cages to keep the deer out next year. They should work for a lot of my shorter plants. However, my Roma tomato and various pepper plants grow over 2 feet tall. For example, here is a picture of a Sweet Banana pepper bed and you can see the plants are just over the 2-foot height...
The deer have been eating the tops off those pepper plants, but they don't actually get any of the plant or the peppers under the 2-foot tall cage. So, I was thinking of making some 3-foot-tall cages for next year, with chicken wire tops, to keep all the deer from eating the plants.

Just a little side info in that one can expect Sweet Banana pepper plants to grow a maximum of 2 feet high. You can clearly see that all my pepper plants are all over 2 feet tall. I think this is because I use a mix of high-quality topsoil and chicken run compost in my raised beds. My plants are growing like crazy. Who knows how tall they would grow if the deer had not eaten the tops off at 2 feet. Even so, one plant is about 3 feet tall.
A couple days ago I ripped a bunch of pallet boards to make the frame for a new 3-foot-tall protective cage. These cages are going to be 53X53 inches instead of the standard 48X48 inch beds I build now. Those extra inches are needed because I used 4X4 posts at every corner for my earlier raised beds.
I set up that pallet wood solid plywood top that I turned into a jig to make my frames. It's just the pallet with some extra scraps of wood to hold the boards in place as I screw them together...
As you can see, the frame is larger than the plywood top. But that's OK. I just rotate the frame into the one corner where I do the work...

I have to say that I really like that jig. It really makes everything come together faster, and easier. That Irwin Quick Grip clamp is my third hand holding the board in place. Working with the frame boards and the jig today, I really started learning how to build them faster. Very nice!
Anyways, here is a picture of the completed 3-foot-tall pallet wood chicken wire protective cage on top of one of my older raised beds with those 4X4 corner posts...

In order for this cage to work, it has to keep out the deer but give me access to work the bed. I am certain that it will keep out the deer, and I would probably not even need any chicken wire top frame for these cages. However, my other concern was if I could reach inside the cage to work the bed.

Unfortunately, the 3-foot-tall cage on top of the 16-inch-high raised bed is just too tall for me to reach all the way into the bed. At almost 4-1/2 feet on the top of the cage, I come up about 12 inches shy of reaching the topsoil. That's a problem.
I have enough chicken wire to build another two 3-foot-tall cages, but everything is stopped until I think about this some more. I can easily reach the topsoil in the raised bed with the 2-foot-tall cages, but not this new 3-foot-tall cage.

I have thought of a few ways to use my standard 2-foot-tall 4X4 foot protective cages on the larger 53X53 inch raised beds. I might be better off just using 2-foot-tall 4X4 foot cages and adding a second cage on top if/when the plants grow taller than 2 feet high. I will be working on some of those ideas in the next few days to see if that might work. I just don't want to build any more 3-foot-tall cages at this point. Again, it's just too tall when sitting on top of my 16-inch-high raised beds.
Well, leaving on a positive note, I filled yet another one of those cages on a raised bed with more leaves. That makes 3 cages and my tiered compost bin full of leaves to use this winter. More than I need, I am sure.
Here is the cage I filled today...

Yeah, I know that cage filled with leaves looks just like the other two I already posted. But I am a little excited about my new leaf storage plan because it is right next to the chicken coop and run. In addition to using the leaves to top the snow in the chicken run this winter, I am also thinking about using some leaves mixed in with my paper shreds for my chicken coop litter. I only use free resources for my coop litter.

A few years ago I built a 12X12 foot storage area out of pallets. I dumped all kinds of leaves in it. The idea was to use them in the winter. However, that storage area is halfway across the yard. When winter came and the snowbanks got up to 3 feet high. I just did not have the energy, or the desire, to shovel out a walkway to that area to get those leaves. I considered that a failure in terms of using those leaves as intended for the chickens in the winter. However, I just let all those leaves sit and compost in place for a couple of years and this spring I used that leaf compost to top off some of my raised beds. So, not a complete failure in the end.