bellcole
Chirping
- Jul 23, 2021
- 11
- 17
- 69
I've had chickens in several different locations on my property over the last few years, and 3 years ago moved them into their final home, which is a raised coop off the back of a shed, with an automatic door opener, motion activated lights, and a fully fenced run (chicken wire over 2x4 inch pool fence wire). The run is NOT covered - the coop and run are at the edge of the woods, so the hawks generally can't see them. However, due to the close proximity to the woods, I've had foxes and raccoons pick off my birds, mostly in the early spring when they are quite hungry (and very bold - they've attacked even during the day.)
This year, I added 18 inches of hardware cloth aprons completely around the pen, extended the height of the fence to 6 feet with hardware cloth bent away from the interior of the pen, and added more hardware cloth above the door and the top of the coop (the coop is not in the interior of the run, but forms one of the walls of the run). I'll try to post a picture tomorrow.
I happen to have a solar powered fence charger, 3 ft and 4 ft posts, and a lot of electric tape that I used for temporary fencing for my horses. I'd like to set this up as an additional predator barrier around the run, but I'm not sure of the best design.
My questions are:
The raccoons did their nasty raccoon game by staging themselves along the fence and waiting for the chickens to panic and run back and forth along the fence line until they (the raccoons) could stick their nasty little raccoon hands through and grab the birds by their necks, and do...you know what they do. That's why I added the chicken wire over the pool wire that was there before (two layers of wire all the way around the run). I would really like them to not get close enough to try anything. Would the new electric fence keep them far enough away?
By the way, the motion activated lights are worthless for scaring off the predators.
Thanks for any thoughts you have!
This year, I added 18 inches of hardware cloth aprons completely around the pen, extended the height of the fence to 6 feet with hardware cloth bent away from the interior of the pen, and added more hardware cloth above the door and the top of the coop (the coop is not in the interior of the run, but forms one of the walls of the run). I'll try to post a picture tomorrow.
I happen to have a solar powered fence charger, 3 ft and 4 ft posts, and a lot of electric tape that I used for temporary fencing for my horses. I'd like to set this up as an additional predator barrier around the run, but I'm not sure of the best design.
My questions are:
- How far away from the existing fence should the electric fence be?
- How many and how far apart should the individual electric tapes be?
- How high should the fence be (what height should the highest tape be set at)?
- Anything else I should think of?
The raccoons did their nasty raccoon game by staging themselves along the fence and waiting for the chickens to panic and run back and forth along the fence line until they (the raccoons) could stick their nasty little raccoon hands through and grab the birds by their necks, and do...you know what they do. That's why I added the chicken wire over the pool wire that was there before (two layers of wire all the way around the run). I would really like them to not get close enough to try anything. Would the new electric fence keep them far enough away?
By the way, the motion activated lights are worthless for scaring off the predators.
Thanks for any thoughts you have!