Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
![]()
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 16 May 2006 09:59:57 -0700, Eric R Snow
wrote: On Tue, 16 May 2006 04:58:06 GMT, Gunner wrote: On Mon, 15 May 2006 18:03:52 -0700, Grant Erwin wrote: We grow strawberries, and the birds get a lot more than we do if we don't net the beds. This year Karen built a raised strawberry bed about 3x10', and she now wants to put bird netting over it. It has to be something you can also take the netting off of so you can work on the bed, pick berries, etc. I was thinking of a sort of quonset hut arrangement with some long skinny whippy bendy things bent into half-hoops over the bed, and we could just lay the bird net over the frame. I was thinking of something like the stuff they make mobile ham antennas out of. Only problem is I don't have a clue where to buy it. Green bamboo would be nice too, if it will bend in a 3' diameter, doubt it would. I was thinking of heavy electrical wire, but I don't have any, and 100' or so of say 6 gauge copper would run some do-re-mi. Ideas? Grant Erwin Kirkland, Washington Two choices most easily done. PVC pipe, or hit all the second hand store for self supporting dome tents (here they are $5 each and net about 4-6 poles that would span 3' with ease..would span 5' easily enough. Just hammer in a piece of black pipe, or put a socket on a tent stake arraingment, stick one end of the pvc or tent "pole: in the socket, bend until it slips into socket on other side of row. Pull net over. At end of season, pull up tent stakes, store in rafters with net until next season. If you have bamboo around..its surprising how well it will bend, particularlly when green or steamed. Gunner "If thy pride is sorely vexed when others disparage your offering, be as lamb's wool is to cold rain and the Gore-tex of Odin's raiment is to gull**** in the gale, for thy angst shall vex them not at all. Yea, they shall scorn thee all the more. Rejoice in sharing what you have to share without expectation of adoration, knowing that sharing your treasure does not diminish your treasure but enriches it." - Onni 1:33 Greetings Gunner, I read this thread because I will be making this year an outdoor area for my cat that will be safe at night. All the choices for the cover that I could think of vexed me because the house will be in the woods and all sorts of stuff will rain down on any netting. So for sure the netting, which will actually be heavy chicken wire, will need to come down once in a while to get the debris off that can't be blasted off with a hose. Making sections out of thrift store fiberglass rods will be perfect. I'll paint the rods black for UV protection if need be. Thanks, Eric G Ill check around..I know Ive already got some I can send you. I keep a small tent in my truck at all times along with my other gear..and every couple years they disintergrate in the heat and I toss em and buy another from the thrift stores. I saw a bag of em the other day. However..for a cat (horderv), Id suggest making up some panels of "pet wire" from Home Depot and putting them together with quick disconnects....tubes and pins. Simply tig or mig the ends of the wire panels to some 1x 3/16 flat or even square stock for rigidity. Perhaps some 1" sharpened stubs on the bottom every so often to prevent it from being pushed around by a dog or coyote or other carivore. Ive seen dogs and other critters go through chicken wire like a laserbeam. Pet wire is light duty welded/woven wire fencing http://www.ext.vt.edu/pubs/bse/442-131/figure3.html or similar A 50' roll is quite inexpensive, and you can make 4 or more sides and the top very inexpensivly. It wont stop a weasel, but it will protect your cats from dogs, coyotes, raptors etc far better than chickewire over flexible poles will. It would be a bitch to come out in the morning and find a flattened cage and bits of cat hair. Plus the panels are easily taken apart and stored standing up along side the shop or next to the air compressor in the winter G Gunner "If thy pride is sorely vexed when others disparage your offering, be as lamb's wool is to cold rain and the Gore-tex of Odin's raiment is to gull**** in the gale, for thy angst shall vex them not at all. Yea, they shall scorn thee all the more. Rejoice in sharing what you have to share without expectation of adoration, knowing that sharing your treasure does not diminish your treasure but enriches it." - Onni 1:33 |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Should a frame survive a fall to the floor? | Woodworking | |||
Gate frame | Metalworking | |||
Corner clamps for a frame, What is this for? | Home Repair | |||
Copper Casting In America (Trevelyan) | Metalworking | |||
frame assembly of Gingery lathe | Metalworking |