The benefit of using the old longe ring for the garden meant that we already had a fence. However, it was a beautiful sturdy weathered wood fence. Perfect for form, not so good for function when it comes to a garden.
The ring was used to exercise horses. Meaning anything smaller than a horse could fit through the fence.
Matt and I decided to add chainlink to keep the bunnies and other hungry creatures away from our garden.
I had collected a few rolls of chainlink from the ends of various people’s driveways, but the ring is so big that I had to buy three more rolls. So this project was definitely the most expensive part of the garden so far coming in at nearly $300.
Fortunately, we didn’t have to buy posts or anything else besides staples. We made use of the wood fence and stapled the chainlink to the existing posts.
Lesson learned, we should have thought a bit more about who does what.
I stretched the fence, and Matt hammered the staples. I have less muscle than Matt, so stretching the fence was hard for me. Matt has bigger fingers than me, so he hammered his fingers a lot while he was holding the staples between the links of the fence.
Matt wasn’t going to give in though. There was no way he was switching roles. So we worked our way around the garden taking breaks to hammer the ground in frustration or slap mosquitoes who just won’t go away this summer.
When we reached the end of a roll, we joined it to the next section by weaving in a single strand of fencing. Just twist, twist, twist until the wire reaches the bottom. (To separate a section of fence, you just reverse the process and untwist one piece of wire. Your fence will easily split in two.)
Eventually, we got a rhythm. A lot of it consisted of us asking each other, “Ready?” And then, “Hold it, woman!”
Our marriage survived, and our garden is fenced.
Fenced, but not gated. We bought wood for the gate last week but haven’t built it yet. So we are still welcoming the hungry creatures–horse-sized and smaller–to our garden.
The thing that I like about the fence is that the chainlink is pretty much invisible, so we still have the aesthetic qualities of the wood fence that I fell in love with from the start.
And to be honest, our garden isn’t really under threat from the local wildlife. Our beans were munched shortly after they sprouted, but the rest of their gardenmates have survived… and thrived. In fact, I think Matt would be happy if a hungry hoard descended on the zucchini.
It looks great!
Thank you!
Too bad the mosquitoes don’t like zucchini. The fence looks great. Good job well done!
With the number of zucchini we have, we might attract more, and we don’t want that!
I love the chain link with the wooden fence. Like you said, you can barely see it!
Practical and pretty.
Great idea, I hope it works.
I remember one year some deer got into our garden and ate all of our beets. They actually pulled up the plants and then ate the red root part but left all of the leafy greens behind. It only happened that one year, after that our dog must have kept the deer away I think.
That’s so funny that they put that much effort into their snack. I didn’t know deer liked beets.