Raul-02
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Aug 23, 2021
- Messages
- 1,467
- Tractor
- kioti DK4710 SE HST CAB
If ya did what kind and How long did it last?
I have an 8’ deer fence around my orchard and garden. I also buried some wire fencing about 1’ deep around the bottom of the fence to exclude rabbits. This has been in place for about 8 years and the buried fence is still sound but surface rusted. But I’m also in a drier climate, not the rust belt. If you do this, don’t bury your main fence in the ground; keep that above ground. Use a little short 2-3’ wide piece to bury. That way when it rusts out, you can remove it and the main fence is still sound.If ya did what kind and How long did it last?
Yah I agree thxi would suspect the hot dipped would excel in your
I think that’s a good strategy, and when it rusts, it won’t affect your main fence.I'm in NJ where it's wet. I plan on trying to exclude moles voles groundhogs and such by burying a length of fence laying flat underground some three feet out from the vertical fence and bending along one side it to join the high tensile fencing.
The idea is mister groundhog will come up to the fence and instinctively start digging and then in 6 or so inches he'll hit steel and be frustrated no matter where he tries this and he won't think to step back away from the fence a few feet and trying again. A
If I lay galv' hardware cloth the holes should be small enough to also exclude the littler critters too
We tend to have gophers, not moles or voles where I live. I have found no fencing solution for them. Traps and poison are the only effective options.Vertical won't deter moles. They dig horizontal. Voles are like mice. A fence won't stop them. They'll climb over it, or dig into a mole tunnel and use the free highway.
If you see nickel-size holes in mole tunnels, that's a good sign that voles are using the mole tunnels. Moles won't make holes in their tunnels to daylight.
Most of the eastern US has acid soil. Most of the of the soil in the west is alkaline,Well I must have acidic soil or something because y'alls tales of decade-old chicken wire in the ground sound pretty fanciful to ears trained by my experiences. I would expect a buried hog panel to last a couple of years tops and anything thinner not worth the time to bury it.