I’ve got a big piece of land, it is all fenced with a decently high fencing, but during the times animals dug holes below it, some parts broke, some animals climb it.

Since I’d like to cultivate/hold animals in, what would be the best way to make THIS fence animal proof, without relying on other fencing around animals or my cultivations? Is it even possible/worth it? We have wolves, foxes, boars, etc etc etc…

I was thinking about electric wiring somehow (?), does it make it foolproof? Otherwise what other options may I have?

  • harambe69@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    17 hours ago

    I highly recommend thorny hedges. Something which has deep roots, grows tall and fast, and is drought-tolerant. For example, Carissa carandas. It was used to great effect.

  • czardestructo@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Not entirely the same as you but I recently moved to a new property with 2000 acres (900 acres ) of protected forest behind me. The deer are out of control and extremely over populated due to no one hunting. I wanted to setup a very large garden and orchard so ive experimented with simple solar powered electric fencing and so far its worked 100%. Just simple fence posts made from pine saplings, I screw the insulator into them and run 3 rows of wire. Once is about 6" off the ground for small animals like rabbits. The second row is 2ft off the ground and third row is 3 ft. The deer get zapped once and learn ‘dont touch’. I watched them all fall eating grass along the fence but never did they try the other side.

  • Zombie@feddit.uk
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    2 days ago

    I’ve got a big piece of land, it is all fenced with a decently high fencing

    As far as nature is concerned, no you don’t. There is just land. Animals don’t know nor care about property laws.

    An electric fence won’t stop animals from digging underneath. It works with domesticated animals, but not so well with wild animals.

    I reckon your best bet is to focus on the area of land where you wish to keep animals in rather than trying to keep animals out of the entirety of the land.

    Repairing fencing is also just a chore of farming that you need to get used to. To reduce the chore, and aid nature at the same time, consider making hedges instead of fences. There’s many tutorial videos on various styles of English hedging if you want to give it a try.

    And finally, despite capitalist agrochemical farming’s insistence, farming is about working with nature, not against it. Good luck!

  • Hule@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Long fences are expensive and labour-intensive.

    Electric fences are reliable, but you need experience setting them up.

    • Dimensions (height, distances between lines)
    • Insulators in the right places
    • The right type of lines
    • The right power
    • Keeping vegetation away
    • evasive_chimpanzee@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I’ve heard, and hopefully someone with a little more experience can chime in, that bears can bust through an electric fence pretty easily because they are a bit less cautious of running through obstacles than deer are, for example. I’ve heard that some people will hang little bits of meat or something on the fence itself when they first install it so that any curious bears will approach the fence itself and get a shock.

  • CameronDev@programming.dev
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    2 days ago

    A moat. Ideally filled with acid or lava. /j

    You could nail some chicken wire to the bottom of fence and bury it as best as possible, should make it difficult to burrow underneath.