My wife really likes geodesic domes. A friend has offered to give us a 16ft metal dome frame (similar to the one in the picture below) that she doesn't use. We need a sheltered aviary for
chickens we'd like to get soon. I have well over 200ft of 4ft wide rolls of 1/2" hardware cloth that I got on sale awhile back that was intended for a
chicken run, but I hadn't foreseen a free 16ft metal geodesic dome coming our way (we will be giving our friend a lot of eggs,
compost and produce to thank her).
My question is, can anyone come up with a reasonable easy, sound and neat method for covering a metal framed geodesic dome with hardware cloth? I can only think of ways that would involve a lot of messy seams/folds (if wrapped in horizontal layers) or sharp cut edges (if cut in triangular pieces), and a ton of tedious "sowing" of the hardware cloth to the frame and between pieces. Anyone have a better idea? Am I just looking for nails because I just got offered a free hammer?
We kept
chickens and ducks for years at our old 1/2acre place near the coast in a modified old
greenhouse that had been inexplicably built to the north of a much larger barn, and had been further shaded as it was grown over by a large maple tree. It was an exceedingly temperate climate down there in the heart of redwood country. Under the maple and surrounded by
hugel beds and forest, temperature extremes and wind were just not an issue for the birds. Unlike up where we are now, keeping them dry and facilitating drainage was the main challenge. So I built an absorption-drainage-runoff system that I posted about under the somewhat tongue-in-cheek title "Hugel-chinampas, now with Duckoponic Swales!" If I do say so myself, that system was a pretty good adaptation of a bass-ackwards property layout that we took on when we bought that fixer upper, but it's a very different context up in the mountains just a few miles east, where we are starting our bird setup from scratch. This 16ft geodesic dome seems like pretty good way to provide birds a nice, protected permanent place to be when we are not able to move them around regularly, and we have a naturally well drained ridge-line spot where the manure runoff will naturally spread through our food forest and hugel beds downhill.
I've put this off because I've had a bit of analysis paralysis about where to place the birds, we have enjoyed not having the daily bird chores as we do many other things as we get this place planted and set up, and until recently friends' chickens provided us with plenty of eggs. Our old place's buyer has even kept many of our birds into their dotage, essentially as pets, and has let us take manured bedding as we want for compost. However, it's a ways to go for a pile of chicken manure, and now that our chicken hoarding friend has moved back to Pennsylvania, we are in need of eggs. Moreover, the garden and 600
trees I've planted on mostly rocky dirt could use some manure and beneficial bird activity around them. However, many of the trees are still small
enough to be vulnerable to birds being allowed to roam freely around them, and I've had it with rebuilding hugel beds every day after birds hop their
fence to scratch them down. So I want to be able to keep them happy and safe in a fairly large enclosed space that is easy to access and amidst the garden and food forest, but where they can be kept off sensitive plants easily. We also have a very healthy raptor and mammalian predator population. So while our Pyrenees-Akbash has always been a good bird protector when we are good
LGD owners, we do like to bring him on backpacking trips and he has charmed his way into being a house dog whenever he wants. He's one hell of a good snuggle. So we need a predator proof run/aviary, and I plan to also build chicken tunnels or a small chicken
tractor for moving the birds around the garden and food forest.
Any ideas on how you'd do this, or ways you've already done similarly, would be of great help, thanks!