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I hear you, I really do. I guess it's just that we'd have to probably hire someone to clear the path of the perimeter fence all around the 2+ acres, an added expense in addition to whatever supplies would be needed. This will be hundreds more in expense for this issue than anticipated after already having spent time, money and lots of energy putting up all this fencing in the first place, hundreds we really don't have when we think of other expenditures coming up soon. I agree that a 24/7 barrier would be better than always being on guard with weaponry, not sure DH would want to spend that. Then, again, losing valuable birds isn't a fun option, either.Considering all you are going through to keep these hounds at bay, and with your physical limitations, I would again implore you to consider helping yourself out with an electric fence. Once you get the brush back from the fence, you would need to keep it at bay, but consider an electric fence to be a far better option than constantly standing vigil with a shotgun. The threat is constant.......and so is the deterrent of the fence.
Here are some photos of a fence I put up to pasture in a section of woods for some horses.
Because it runs through dense woods, I only had to clear that path once.......and that was months ago.
Here is another fence that may be like yours............
This is out in the open, but note how the brush and weeds have grown up around it. Also note the single wire on top. That wire is not hot, but it could be made so easily with little to no concern about it grounding out from weeds. As is, a whole lot of dogs could simply jump on it and climb it. But if that top wire was hot, the moment they touched it, they would drop off and run the other way. I note how you mentioned the dog in question climbed to get out? Well they almost certainly did the same thing to get in. A hot fence would stop them from doing that.
Mostly I keep harping on this out of concern for you and your birds. Shooting your neighbors dogs inside the wire as a defensive strategy is will eventually going to fail, ending in some tragic report where the dogs got in and all your birds were killed. At best, that is short term until you can do better.
We raised AKC Dobermans when I was a kid, probably some of the only folks who kept their dogs fenced. My dad put those leaning brackets at the top of our 5' chain link fence that leaned inward and held 3 strands of barbed wire across and around the perimeter of the fence, because, obviously, a Dobe has the agility to jump a fence with little problem. Not sure if that would work or not, but it would be not easy to do with this type fence, I'd think.
I'd like to have a hot fence, for dogs, coyotes as well as human predators, certainly. This is an area I'm just now learning about, too. How do you handle all the gates? We have four gates, including the driveway gate, in the perimeter fence. How do you continue the run across a gate? We go through the back chain link gate into the pasture quite a bit, and the driveway gate, of course. The other two are rarely used, the one at the front corner is never used so it's not a problem, could go right across that.
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