Do any of you have dogs and gardens? Curious to see your setup to keep the dog from jumping into the garden and eating or having a nap right on top of your freshly planted jalapeno bush.
We started our first garden this year in Colorado. We only have a really small dog though that won't bother it , so I'm not much help there.Do any of you have dogs and gardens? Curious to see your setup to keep the dog from jumping into the garden and eating or having a nap right on top of your freshly planted jalapeno bush.
Two are young, one likes to eat things and the other likes to dig. I have some ideas for it, but just looking for inspiration probably. If I just fence the planters in, it becomes hard to get to the plant but I need the fence high enough to keep a coonhound from hopping over it to dig.We started our first garden this year in Colorado. We only have a really small dog though that won't bother it , so I'm not much help there.
How big/obnoxious are your dogs? Most of the people here use wire mesh enclosure to keep out unwanted critters like rabbits/squrrels etc. but I guess it would be the same for dogs.
Two are young, one likes to eat things and the other likes to dig. I have some ideas for it, but just looking for inspiration probably. If I just fence the planters in, it becomes hard to get to the plant but I need the fence high enough to keep a coonhound from hopping over it to dig.
I'm using raised planters for most of it so I might use 1x2's, chicken wire and cut my own gate.Most of the solutions I've seen usually end up with chain link and a gate. That soft dirt is just too appealing to resist!
Two are young, one likes to eat things and the other likes to dig. I have some ideas for it, but just looking for inspiration probably. If I just fence the planters in, it becomes hard to get to the plant but I need the fence high enough to keep a coonhound from hopping over it to dig.
I'm using raised planters for most of it so I might use 1x2's, chicken wire and cut my own gate.
Along the back wall I assume...These are my raised planters. The problem is, they jump onto them to patrol the yard, so I'll be building an additional layer on the inside of the planter wall that need to be tall enough they wont try to leap over it to bark at birds and whatnot
You must be registered for see images attach
Indeed, definitely a more expensive option. Chicken wire is very flimsy. Are you trying to build a chicken wire roof as well that attaches to the brick wall?the fence would be along the front wall of the planter, so, like, the pool fence and the dog fence would surround the food.
That spiked fencing is quite fancy lol...I'll probably do something much cheaper
I mostly just want to keep dogs out, so, no roof. Plus, I'm 6'5 so a ceiling would make things interesting when it comes to pruning, harvesting, etc.Indeed, definitely a more expensive option. Chicken wire is very flimsy. Are you trying to build a chicken wire roof as well that attaches to the brick wall?
The bottom won't be flimsy. The top will sway and buckle if it isn't stabilized... unless you already had a plan for it.I mostly just want to keep dogs out, so, no roof. Plus, I'm 6'5 so a ceiling would make things interesting when it comes to pruning, harvesting, etc.
I'm thinking maybe chicken wire stapled to 1x2s wouldnt be flimsy at all.
Not yet that's where I was hoping someone had something similarThe bottom won't be flimsy. The top will sway and buckle if it isn't stabilized... unless you already had a plan for it.
I'd consider 1x1 or 1x2s across the top as well, bracing it every 8-10ft using a vertical piece of wood as well. Have you considered what type of mechanism you will use to get access to the garden? You could use something like eyehooks and connect the chicken wire that way and roll it back when you want to get in there.Not yet that's where I was hoping someone had something similar
I was thinking a boxed design of wood, maybe 4 feet tall and a veritcle 1x2 maybe every 18 inches with horizontal 1x2 along the top and the bottom but no room. Then I was thinking maybe making every other section a "gate" vs just fence so I can get up in there. The thing I did not consider is going from the fence to the wall or etc and that will probably be neccessary just for stability unless the dirt itself will hold it in place. The gate should be at least 1 ft underground if I try to use the dirt to secure it. The only problem there is I am not sure if 3 ft height would 100% deter a dog from jumping it.I'd consider 1x1 or 1x2s across the top as well, bracing it every 8-10ft using a vertical piece of wood as well. Have you considered what type of mechanism you will use to get access to the garden? You could use something like eyehooks and connect the chicken wire that way and roll it back when you want to get in there.
3-4 feet I would think would be plenty, since it already seems about 2ft off of the ground already.I was thinking a boxed design of wood, maybe 4 feet tall and a veritcle 1x2 maybe every 18 inches with horizontal 1x2 along the top and the bottom but no room. Then I was thinking maybe making every other section a "gate" vs just fence so I can get up in there. The thing I did not consider is going from the fence to the wall or etc and that will probably be neccessary just for stability unless the dirt itself will hold it in place. The gate should be at least 1 ft underground if I try to use the dirt to secure it. The only problem there is I am not sure if 3 ft height would 100% deter a dog from jumping it.
It would be real nice if I didnt have to make a damn fence lol
The problem with off the ground is they jump up onto those bricks already, so, unless the fence was on the bricks themselves, they can jump onto the bricks and then jump again.3-4 feet I would think would be plenty, since it already seems about 2ft off of the ground already.
For stability, you could just put in a 1x2 section that goes along the top, to the back brick wall every 8-10 feet. It will still be plenty stable, unless someone is trying to stand on the top or whatever.
yeah I have thought about it being against the ground, instead of in the planter. That is even uglier, but, if it does not impeded a sprinkler, it may be what I need to do. It would also allow me easier access to the plants instead of another 3ft level on top of the 3-4ft plantersIf you build the chicken wire enclosure at the very front of the bricks towards the grass, they won't be able to jump on the bricks at all, because the wire will be in the way.
yeah, don't do it against the ground. Just run a horizontal 2x2 across the entire front of the planter brick, and secure it to the brick with liquid nails or even archor bolts.yeah I have thought about it being against the ground, instead of in the planter. That is even uglier, but, if it does not impeded a sprinkler, it may be what I need to do. It would also allow me easier access to the plants instead of another 3ft level on top of the 3-4ft planters
That is an ugly, but, interesting thought that I might use.yeah, don't do it against the ground. Just run a horizontal 2x2 across the entire front of the planter brick, and secure it to the brick with liquid nails or even archor bolts.
Then staple the chicken wire to the side of the 2x2 going vertically up.
It is hard to tell from your picture, but it looks like the brick steps where the dogs jump onto might have a lip on it.That is an ugly, but, interesting thought that I might use.