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I'll look into this- we need a horse fix, being in-town and having no access to horsies...I'm in love with them and it kills me a little each day...
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Being a new egg and all, I thought I should make a big impression.
I just couldn't in good conscience let my fellow Kansas chicken lovers here, on BYC, not partake in such a good deal. I was just in Porters today and a 50-foot roll is $57
The wife will be making a run there tomorrow. I secured 2 rolls for $70. Just in time too! I'm in the process of building a run.
I didn't know about the Christmas fund. Maybe I should get 3 rolls.
Happy hardware clothing!
I have a question...do you use it horizontally or vertically for your runs? Do you overlap it and then zip tie it together?
If I'm using it for runs, I'll overlap it (so I got the taller stuff so I can still work with standard 8' measurements) and either use the metal zip ties to secure the overlap, or I take a pencil and bale wire and make a spiral (like a notebook) and spin it through in sections. I don't secure the whole thing, but 6" sections with 8-10" gaps. If making runs from it, the whole run has to be made of it, so I can leave the pop door open. If not making a pop-door-open type environment, I use the hardware cloth to make an attached 'screen porch' for the coop, so that there is a solid coop with a pop door, and a secure, albeit small, run. Then this whole thing is in a much larger, welded wire, avian netting run.
On some coops, I've made huge doors or windows from the hardware cloth, or even a whole side of the coop. This is tightly covered in 6 mil clear plastic with a staplegun in the winter, and provides heat in a greenhouse-like effect. I have also covered smaller runs in the plastic, over the top like a hoophouse, connected to the coop but open at the other end. This keeps off the snow, heats up in the sun, and protects from excessive wind. I designing a new set-up now for all of my runs and coops to be in a huge, connected, contained 2000 sq ft prairie area, and I'm really hoping to make it a wonderful environment for them. Each coop will have a 'porch' for mild weather, but I'll plastic that area in the winter for a greenhouse on each coop. They'll have their own open run off of the porch, as well as the solid, wood coop for sleeping safely. I'm very excited about this! It's a lot of building, though.
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Praise God!!! Give us some more, Big Guy? Not too much, and not too heavy. Steady rain overnight and sunny days for work time. Thanks, God!