Ideas on humane fence-top squirrel barrier?
bostedo: 8a tx-bp-dfw
10 years ago
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rhizo_1 (North AL) zone 7
10 years agoRelated Discussions
Low-growing sidewalk fence ideas?
Comments (9)Thanks for all the suggestions! To answer some of the issues brought up: isabella_ma, straight sidewalk right at the street with no buffer sod, east facing. I like the low-growing junipers idea, will think about that ironbelly, the sign thought crossed my mind... more along the lines of - "Please keep your poodle off my grass, and I'll keep my St. Bernards off yours." (I actually have fixed boxers and a mutt, but nobody sees them so what would they know.) ;-) Nandina, lol.. short-sighted is an understatement. My community sees only the bottom line - show them the money and they'll show you the welcome mat (= airport expansion in the middle of a bedroom community... how stupid is that?... Jets landing and taking off at 1am are not conducive for a good night's rest.) This was one fishy deal (zone changes 20 years ago but lost paperwork to prove it, etc) and we did fight it. Neighbors shelled out upwards of $200 apiece for a lawyer to help us, and we attended several council meetings to present our side and get snarky comments from our yuppy mayor. Postponed construction for 8 months... whoopie. We did manage to get the developer to pay for the sidewalk; they were going to charge us for the privilege of having a safe(r) place for our kids to walk to school (how the city got away with not putting the sidewalk in in the first place I'll never know). There are pockets of woods disappearing like this all over. It sucks, but life goes on. laag, these were not exactly the projects - interestingly each unit of these four-plexes cost about the same as my house. Not sure what would possess anyone to buy one, but must be some reason. ;-) I like the fence idea, am wondering about one of those upright and connecting rope things, though - maybe at a height to keep the humans from tripping, and with chicken wire at the bottom to keep the pooches from going under. Plantings would be on our side and grow up over and hopefully through somewhat. Still looking for something that will not grow much width-wise but up - maybe a vine? Still thinking... cathy_in_pa, I will be finding out about speed bumps... guess a call to city hall is next for that one. Thanks for reminding me. littledog, I think that's what she meant for that. I agree about not being held hostage. But I can adapt. Maybe this is what I needed to actually landscape my yard. That'll be the way I think of it. :-)...See MoreSuggestion on some type of fence, barrier, or wall.
Comments (3)My sympathies, Takkie. In my experience living in a windy area, solid barriers (such as walls) direct the wind (bearing garbage) up and over the wall top; whereas intermittent barriers (such as picket, lattice and other kinds of open-work fencing) slow the wind, thus allowing the trash to drop outside the fence. Of course, somebody still has to go outside the fence to pick it up, but it doesn't get so much of it inside your yard. Another trick used by veggie gardeners in rabbit and deer zones, is to put chicken wire or hardware cloth inside the picket fencing: almost invisible but definitely a trash- (and rabbit-) stopper. Your cheapest solution may be that picket fencing you mentioned, backed up by the metal trash-stoppers I mentioned. But only 2 ft. high may not keep out enough. Any way you could go at least 30" (2.5 ft.) high? Pickets would look better at that height, anyway. Carol...See MoreMost effecient/economical deer barrier/fence
Comments (44)I know the original poster is not going to use electric fence. But since it came up, I will chime in. If you use electric fence, my advice is to make sure it is always hot. Once the animals learn that it is not always hot, they have incentive to find ways to test it. For example, they might push other animals into the fence (pigs do this), or sniff it (I don't think it is smell, but if you are at the right distance from the fence, you can feel a weak zap that is not painful). Etc. Or they may associate the sound with the fence being hot. I don't think the wire makes noise, but the fence energizer does. And if there is any brush in contact with the hot wire, then there will usually be an audible arcing sound where the fence arcs to the brush. Also, it pays to use a very strong energizer. This ups the ante on experimentation. I have goats, and when I was using a weak energizer, they eventually decided that getting shocked once or twice while they jumped over or walked under the fence wasn't really that bad. When I got a stronger energizer, they started staying inside again. --McKenzie...See MoreIdeas for barriers to protect edging from "landscape workers"?
Comments (13)Melissa, No, the Roundup is for the ignoramus landscape workers who keep carelessly breaking my fencing, not the weeds, LOL. The hosta garden under the tree has the pretty brown lawn edging set into a trench around it. Then the Adirondack fencing right out side of that (any ideas on how to get the stray bits of grass growing between the 2 to go away?). Then I will dig the moat immediately outside the Adir. fencing. My favorite nursery (oh man, you would DROOL over the flowers they already have out and the gorgeous trees, bushes and shrubs out back in their "secret garden") told me that I do not need plastic lawn edging on the side of the moat away from the Adir. fencing, just cut the trench and line it with the lawn fabric. And then fill the moat with 3/4" gravel, not pea gravel. I am wondering if I need to pour some Round-Up in the moat or would it infiltrate and hurt the hosta garden. I am also FURIOUS, just furious, that I ordered some additional faux-stone fencing from Amazon (coming from Grady Hardware in MN) and that Grady Hardware took their sweet good time about shipping the fencing. First I was told it would arrive between Tuesday and Friday of this week, which would be perfect so I could install it around the Neighbor's Plot so that I could till the soil in there without it pouring out of the Plot right onto the lawn. Now I'm told its new estimated arrival time is this Saturday. If it doesn't arrive Saturday, then I can't do the tilling in the N.P. this Sunday, and the hostas and heuchies for that plot will be arriving during the week without a place to plant them yet. I will use the time instead to dig the moat around my own garden plot and the hosta garden under the tree. Grrr!...See Moremorz8 - Washington Coast
10 years agobostedo: 8a tx-bp-dfw
10 years agotsugajunkie z5 SE WI ♱
10 years agobostedo: 8a tx-bp-dfw
10 years agoLaron Street
5 years agoNHBabs z4b-5a NH
5 years ago
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ken_adrian Adrian MI cold Z5