Stupid Squirrels Digging In My Gardens!
I've been busy making some more protective cages for my raised beds to keep the squirrels out. I planted a bunch of onion bulbs in one of my elevated beds and the next day I discovered that a squirrel had dug up all the bulbs!
Google picture reenactment...
I could not believe that the stupid squirrel would dig up one onion bulb, decide not to eat it, but then dig up each and every other onion bulb just the same. Made a total mess out of my raised bed.
So, I have been ripping some pallet wood 2X4's to make light weight framing for more protective cages to put on my raised beds. I built one yesterday using my new air stapler to put everything together. I am really liking that air
brad/stapler gun that I got from Harbor Freight. For light duty stuff, like these frames with chicken wire, the staples are a fast way to build the cages.
BTW, my particular stapler is on clearance at Harbor Freight, so once they are gone, they are gone. If you use any pneumatic tools, this is a great tool to have in your toolbox.
I have to build some more cages and chicken wire panels for my raised beds. It's too bad that I have to protect everything out in the gardens, but if I don't the rabbits, squirrels, and later, the deer, will just eat everything I have worked to grow.
I'll add a few pictures of the type of cages I am building with pallet wood. Some of them have wire on top to totally enclose the beds, some of the cages are open on top if I only have to protect against the deer. Here is one cage with chicken wire top on my raised bed...
In addition to those protective cages, I have built a number of chicken wire panels which I put on my trellis raised beds. They are meant to keep the deer from eating the whole tomato plants like they did last year. Here is a picture from last year of what a panel on a trellis bed looks like...
Using those basic designs, I have been making cages that are 1-foot, 2-foot or 4-foot-high depending on what is planted in that raised bed. So far, all the cages I have built this year have used pallet wood and repurposed chicken wire. Total cost = ZERO dollars. I only have enough used chicken wire for one more small cage. However, I have a new 50-foot roll of 4 feet high chicken wire in my shed, plus a partial roll of 2-foot-high chicken wire that I can use. So, I should be able to make enough cages for all my current garden beds.

I have picked out a spot to put down another new 4X4 foot pallet wood raised bed. But I have to finish building those protective cages and panels to protect the beds I have planted first. We have gone from severe thunderstorms to high heat and humidity this past week, and for an old man, I don't get as much done as I would like. But I am making some progress on my to-do list, so that will have to be good enough for now.

I went with the option of individual protective cages for my garden beds, because I had some old chicken wire to use, plus some plants needed protection from the squirrels and rabbits as well as deer. I have a friend who has a backyard vineyard, and he had to put up 8-foot-tall fencing with angled wire on the top. It looks like a concentration camp, but that is what it took to keep the deer out of his vineyard. I don't want to invest that kind of money to protect my tomatoes and peppers. The cages and panels I have built are working so far.