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| Forums > Marijuana Growing > Cannabis Growing Outdoors > Making cages to keep animals away from plants | ||
| Making cages to keep animals away from plants | Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
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#151 |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: 100 Acre wood
Posts: 613
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I know this is not good for us but we used to throw a roll of chicken wire into a fire to burn off the galvanized coating. It rusts up quick and matches in to the sorroundings better than shiny new metal
Peace Mutt
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If life hands you a lemon, peel it and eat it out of spite! then smoke a bowl |
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4 members found this post helpful. |
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#152 |
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Member
Join Date: Nov 2017
Posts: 137
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plastic netting instead of chicken wire
has nyone tride putting in stable posts dug down deep around the plant, then wraping some plastic netting rather then chicken wire i will be doing exactly this this coming season
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#153 |
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Observer
![]() Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: uni-verse
Posts: 5,584
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Most plastics will photo degrade fairly quickly.
If what you plan to use is UV resistant it might work but I'm unaware of any animals that will be stopped by plastic netting. Especially the burrowing type. |
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1 members found this post helpful. |
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#154 |
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Member
Join Date: Nov 2017
Posts: 137
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thanks for that reply yeah yesterday i was at my site doing some digging and what not and tried a test cage with the plastic netting i was talking about and came to the conclusion that it wont work. my biggest problem is not deer but wild boar..... these guys are huge and REALY strong adn their nature is more rugged and messy they would tear down that net where a deer might get discouraged and go on its way. the thing with boars is that as soon as they smell freshly tilled soil they are all over it digging through iot trying to find grubs ad bugs. i think that for places where there ar bors rather than deer we would have to put the cage arond the entire hole not just around the plant
QUOTE=MJPassion;8114854]Most plastics will photo degrade fairly quickly. If what you plan to use is UV resistant it might work but I'm unaware of any animals that will be stopped by plastic netting. Especially the burrowing type.[/quote] |
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#155 |
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Member
Join Date: Nov 2017
Posts: 137
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if someone would like to share their thoughts about using sticks and branches to construct a fenc/wall/enclosure around their plants. i have done this with success but would love to hear other peoples experience using this idea
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#156 |
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Member
Join Date: Apr 2013
Posts: 233
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I am currently using sticks as a deterrent. They are poking out of the ground around the cage, acting as a secondary barrier.
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#157 |
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Member
Join Date: Nov 2017
Posts: 137
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at all my sites i have deer not far away but they dont seem to ever touch my girls. one morning as i approached to water i saw a deer bolt off from right in the middle of my patch. it didnt touch a leaf. but in my are there is a beast far more dangerouse then deer....... these mudda pakking wild boars! they are savage, robust, like to make a mess for fun, are expert at digging up plants to find that tasty horse poop i put underneeth. and the worst is that if they want to get something, they are capable of taking down genuine real fencing. they are extremely powerful. so i just have to hope they dont find my project sites to be to interesting. does anyone use real barbed wire? going to use chicen wire cages with atleast 4 posts per cage to anchore them best as possible. then pile,up sticks and branches woven together to make a secondary line of defenece.
In my humble opinion we must diligently apply stakes and some form of keeping the cage fixed tightly in place. happy digging and hauling everyone |
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#158 |
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Member
Join Date: Apr 2013
Posts: 233
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Dig 2 feet below the surface, your chicken wire should go down that far to prevent vermin from digging up all soil and fertilizing that you carefully planted and nature carefully baked to the right living state.
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#159 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2017
Posts: 50
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Rabbit Cage + Seven Dust
Glad I discovered this thread before attempting my outdoor project. Think I'll start my Lowryder yungins off in a rabbit cage to keep critters out. By the time they start flowering hopefully they'll be less appealing to rabbits, possums, armadillos & other small creatures in the area.
For insects I have Seven Dust, but will only use that EARLY in the grow if there's an acute insect infestation. Not too keen about using that on my plants but I hear it works so I can always just do a thorough flush before harvesting. Other natural repellent ideas I can use as a first-line of defense: human hair, human urine, soap shavings, aluminum foil around stalk (for slugs), garlic, sharp spikes & various essential oils. (This is not a guerilla grow in some forest but we do have a plethora of bugs & small critters like rabbits & gophers). No deer, thank goodness, and no wild boars this close to where I'll be planting! Some of y'all have it ROUGH!
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#160 | |
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Quote:
I cut wood for heat so have lots of branches to pile up and build nearly completely enclosed areas w 1 trail in/out. Rabbits & squirrels love the piles & if not caged, my plants that are in them. |
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