CageKY
In the Brooder
I now live in the incredibly beautiful Appalachian foothills of northeastern Kentucky. We are in the wild and rugged hill farms of north Daniel Boone NF.
This means our new home and surrounding property literally had to be bulldozed, carved and jackhammerered out of crumbly rock. Even our soil, and I use that term loosely and generously, is clay...which means it's either 4 inch deep snot or concrete hard parking lot.
My point being: I simply can NOT dig any sort of trench around my chicken run to bury hardware cloth four inches, much less 12 inches, deep due to the obstacles mentioned (plus I'm old, tired and lazy), yet critters seem to find the soft spots and they sure CAN!
A neighbor just 7 miles away laid 3 ft high wire down on the ground around her run and covered it with barn dressing to age over the winter and then seeded it. She says she's had no varmint (or even mice) digging issues since doing that and it was easier than making pie.
Anyone else heard of this? I'm seriously thinking of giving it a go if no one can convince me I'm wasting my time or money.
This means our new home and surrounding property literally had to be bulldozed, carved and jackhammerered out of crumbly rock. Even our soil, and I use that term loosely and generously, is clay...which means it's either 4 inch deep snot or concrete hard parking lot.
My point being: I simply can NOT dig any sort of trench around my chicken run to bury hardware cloth four inches, much less 12 inches, deep due to the obstacles mentioned (plus I'm old, tired and lazy), yet critters seem to find the soft spots and they sure CAN!
A neighbor just 7 miles away laid 3 ft high wire down on the ground around her run and covered it with barn dressing to age over the winter and then seeded it. She says she's had no varmint (or even mice) digging issues since doing that and it was easier than making pie.
Anyone else heard of this? I'm seriously thinking of giving it a go if no one can convince me I'm wasting my time or money.