When I see an adult on a bicycle, I do not despair for the future of the human race. ~H.G. Wells
“Enough is as good as a feast"
-Mary Poppins
When I see an adult on a bicycle, I do not despair for the future of the human race. ~H.G. Wells
“Enough is as good as a feast"
-Mary Poppins
Andy Cook wrote:This is the fence I put up at our place in SE Alaska where deer are walking by us all the time: http://www.permacultureactivist.net/articles/Better%20Deer%20Fence%2081.pdf
I modified it by using 5' welded wire instead of chicken wire, a run of 3/8" yellow poly rope on the outside of the fence as well as the the two strands on the inside, and a run of electric fence on the outside to keep bears out. No deer inside the fence for two years and counting.
We are in the process of planting thorny plants along the inside of the fence to eventually become a protective hedge around the property.
Russell Olson wrote:
Andy Cook wrote:This is the fence I put up at our place in SE Alaska where deer are walking by us all the time: http://www.permacultureactivist.net/articles/Better%20Deer%20Fence%2081.pdf
I modified it by using 5' welded wire instead of chicken wire, a run of 3/8" yellow poly rope on the outside of the fence as well as the the two strands on the inside, and a run of electric fence on the outside to keep bears out. No deer inside the fence for two years and counting.
We are in the process of planting thorny plants along the inside of the fence to eventually become a protective hedge around the property.
I was in the process of writing a post on deer when I saw this thread.
This design looks great, does it need the electric fence if I'm only keeping deer out?
I was considering fencing an area I will be starting a food forest from this spring, the deer eat anything outside of a fence.
I'm going to revamp my post, I have some cool observations I'd like to share.
Bill Bradbury wrote:Yes, hedgerows and sharing are the permaculture answers to deer wanting to eat. We humans move into the forest and then wish to exclude the wild animals. What right do we have to exclude deer from their habitat, besides paying another human some money? Did you pay the wild for the right to live where you do?
I have seen the carnage that these fences wreak on mostly deer when they attempt to jump it and fall. The rich types here have erected a fence all the way across their large suburban sprawl on the bench of our little mountain valley which becomes littered with the corpses of deer that are just trying to eat. The 3 permaculture landscapes that I have designed, installed and maintain all incorporate the wild into the fertility sequence.
We can easily feed ourselves and the wild critters, creating a harmonious bounty for all!
List of Bryant RedHawk's Epic Soil Series Threads We love visitors, that's why we live in a secluded cabin deep in the woods. "Buzzard's Roost (Asnikiye Heca) Farm." Promoting permaculture to save our planet.
Russell Olson wrote:
I can appreciate that perspective, however the idea that they are willing to forgo eating every single thing I plant isn't true. They are voracious and overpopulated here. Anything I don't protect becomes their food.
I'm very willing to plant hedgerows along the fence so that they can feed on things, I'm even ok with planting specific things for their benefit.
I'm even willing to leave areas unfenced in certain spots. I plan on trying a feed plot for them the opposite end of the property from where I am starting a forest garden.
I simply don't know how I can have the type of permicultural property without some sort of deer control.
Any suggestions? Keep in mind I haven't found anything they don't eat to the point of killing it. I even have no native seedlings due to their browsing.
$10.00 is a donation. $1,000 is an investment, $1,000,000 is a purchase.
Cécile Stelzer Johnson wrote:I use cattle panels 50"high hung by hooks on timber posts [4"X 4"X 8", sunk 2 ft in the ground]. (Using hooks means that I can remove fencing at a moment's notice, either for my chickens to do the fall cleanup in the garden, or mow short between the posts where I want a 'clean edge').
A build too cool to miss:Mike's GreenhouseA great example:Joseph's Garden
All the soil info you'll ever need:
Redhawk's excellent soil-building series
Lorenzo Costa wrote:I have been thinking about this aspect to for quite a time now. I have 3.5 hectares where there are a lot of deers and wild boars. they both are a real big problem. the rest of my land is a woodland of another 2.6 hectares that I will leave free to range for them and has one boundary made up by a yearlong creek. It's to down the hill to use water and I like sort like zone 5 stuff so I'll not speak about fencing it.
the 3.5 hectares are my burden. I've been on to living fences, and hedgelaying there are threads on this, here's one, just to have more ideas: https://permies.com/t/1437/woodland/Planning-growing-hedge-living-fence
I'v been putting together some numbers, if I fence out the 3.6 hectares, knowing that on side it's already fenced by my neighbor I'll work, let's say one month and probably have a fence for the next thirty years, using what we usually use as poles for fences, chestnut poles. ,
If I put a living fence I'll have to: first, plant all the tree's protecting them form the deers and the boars that sort of love to flip everything around if they don't like to eat it; then wait three or four years to have a benefit from the growing hedge.
I read this book on hedges: Murray Maclean, Hedges and Hedgelaying, the title was recommended on the thread I highlighted before, and there is a good table showing how many plants one should use it goes from 1 metre length hedge to 1 km, and from 6 inch spacing in between plants to 36 inch depending on plant growing space: so for a 655 metre hedge with 12 inch spacing the author calculates 2,182 plants
for the plants he considers a lot of varieties, because what he insists on is the importance even of wildlife conservation, as birds or small mammals, and I agree with his vision. we have to think of the hedge as an exlcuding barrier but even a wildlife housing and food feature.
Hawthorn should be not less than 60% of the plants variety beacuse it has a quick growth, then he speaks a lot of blackthorn, dog rose, field maple, hazel, if we speak of small trees or shrubs. if one wants tu use tree's the spacing is more and the time to wait to have a close hedge is longer. I would think of two more that in the book the author doesn't list: black locust, and Osage Orange quick growing and full of thornes, one could put them mixed with other plants and shrubs.
I like the idea of having yields for the deers on the hedge so they don't get to want to cross the hedge. Hedgelaying is another possibility to work quick and fast but you always get to wait three or four years. the hedge though gets thicker, even though there is maintenance to do every three or four years depends on what you want and how high. I think I'll end up fencing my plot though I will try to fencing with poles in a classic way and establish my living fence behind the day I have my poles rotting and want to take them off I'll have a living fence behind at least it will establish well and be stable for the moment it will have to be useful. the small birds and mammals will benefit from the hedge that grows even if there is a fence so I will give anyway a yield to someone.
the big point is the time we have and what we harvest form our plots.
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