Cheap, Fast, & Easy DIY Garden Deer Fence that WORKS

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  • čas přidán 21. 05. 2017
  • #84: We needed a quick, inexpensive, and effective solution to keep deer from getting in our garden and this T-post fence with 30# fishing line idea we found on another channel worked great. It kept whitetail deer out of our garden all summer. +AMDG
    Credit to JEofWV for the fence idea in his video: • Video
    #gardening
    #deerfence
    #homestead
    #DIY
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 260

  • @PrattFamilyHomestead
    @PrattFamilyHomestead Před 7 lety +54

    Awesome! This is exactly what we did and have had no problems! We don't have this implemented in our new garden yet though. When I was looking at deer fencing solutions 3 years ago, the guy at TSC is the one that told me not to spend a lot of money yet...try 30lbs fishing line. So we did and were happy! Our posts were even very far a part! - Mike

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 7 lety +6

      Mike, glad to hear that it worked well for someone else. In the original video, I still can't believe how many people said it didn't work, because it is working perfectly for us even weeks later. Thanks for stopping by and commenting! Hope you and yours are doing great!

    • @jtimwest
      @jtimwest Před 6 lety +1

      I used invisible fence and it worked. Have to spray weekly or sooner and if it rains. I also used sprinklers with sensors that would spray the deer when they tripped it. Worked for a while. All three with this fence should work well

    • @CameoFarmer
      @CameoFarmer Před 8 měsíci +1

      Have you ever had trouble with deer getting their antlers tangled?

  • @cyramclennan2580
    @cyramclennan2580 Před 2 lety +25

    I know this video is 4 years ago and you probably already have better fencing, but for those who want to do this and want a door for the garden, use a cucumber trellis as the door. We had one that we no longer used, that was rectangle shape and we just zip tied one side like 'hinges' to one side of a post and attached a chain to the other side so we can 'lock' the fence. This type of fence worked for us for 3 years until we upgraded and got a roll of fence fabric off of Amazon to wrap around the parameter of the posts. Very affordable option for those who don't have the money or need a quick solution!!

  • @johanna8206
    @johanna8206 Před 11 měsíci +11

    I tried this at 4' and 2' approximately. Kept the deer out for a couple of days until they figured out how to climb through. Your spacings probably would have worked longer, but I feel like they still would have figured it out. I live in a suburban neighborhood and my deer are not spooked by anything, really. I've walked out to shout at one for eating my trees and it squared off with me and stamped its foot. Also had them walk by within feet of me when I was weeding in the garden. They just don't care 😂😣.

  • @lucindagaskill4519
    @lucindagaskill4519 Před 3 lety +10

    This makes so much sense.
    I've been sweating over the cost of other fencing but this I can afford !

  • @donnawho109876hendri
    @donnawho109876hendri Před 7 lety +10

    Thank you for taking the time to explain. It is working great for the 20 fruit trees I just planted. The deer ate two branches before I had a chance to put the fishing ring up. working great!! Thank you!! Take care!!

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 7 lety +1

      You're welcome and thank YOU for taking the time to comment. We really can't take credit for the idea, but I'm glad it helped protect your fruit trees! God bless!

  • @mgoh1984
    @mgoh1984 Před rokem +1

    I appreciate your honesty, talking about how it works for you but can't guarantee it will work for everyone. So many idiots making videos promising things that just aren't true.

  • @iamorganicgardening
    @iamorganicgardening Před 7 lety +8

    What a great solution for the price...WELL DONE.. Look at that Garden..NICE.

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 7 lety +4

      Mark, the garden is looking amazing, and it is do entirely to your suggestion about the raised beds IN the Back to Eden garden (wood chips). We would have been waiting for them to decompose and not planted this year. Everything is taking off. We've harvested pounds of sugar snaps, radishes, beets, lettuce, etc, and the tomato plants are exploding - setting lots of tomatoes already. Again, thank you for all your help and advice. Oh, and the sunflowers are really coming along!

  • @Simplelittlelife
    @Simplelittlelife Před 7 lety +5

    That's a good idea. Kind of got me to thinking if it might work for our chickens that free range. Never at all did I think about fishing line. 1" apart would take some time but man, that's be cheap! Thanks for this! Much appreciated!

  • @SolSystemDiplomat
    @SolSystemDiplomat Před 2 měsíci

    Dude thank god. It’s not even Mother’s Day yet and the deer ravished my grape vines. It never occurred to me to use fishing line. Thank you thank you

  • @phyllisberry3590
    @phyllisberry3590 Před 3 lety +3

    Thank you for sharing this.We're going to try it. The price is right!

  • @bigrandy1958
    @bigrandy1958 Před 7 lety +6

    Thanks for the awesome tip. I WILL be doing this around my corn field!

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 7 lety +1

      Hope it works as well for you as it has for us!

  • @MountainsBU
    @MountainsBU Před 3 lety +6

    we also use monofilament fishing line over the open area of our fenced area for our chickens and ducks. String it back and forth in an irregular pattern to prevent hawks from diving into the area. It doesn't even have to be closely strung, just irregular. The gaps on ours are about 6 feet apart. It is essentially invisible to people, but ariel predators can see it. The monofilment fishing line also keeps deer out of our garden area.

  • @ashu1gupta
    @ashu1gupta Před 5 lety +44

    Great solution and nice video. Thanks for putting this up. The degradation of Monofilament Fishing Line over time under sun would be an issue as it is not UV resistant. If the fence is going to stay for long term, consider using Fluorocarbon Fishing Line which is UV resistant.

  • @oingoboingo4455
    @oingoboingo4455 Před 4 lety

    This is a good idea - those pesky deer love rooming and gazing . Have a blessed day

  • @LifeinFarmland
    @LifeinFarmland Před 7 lety +5

    Awesome! Simple yet effective. Great tip!

  • @jimcoutsos2270
    @jimcoutsos2270 Před 3 lety +6

    I put up a fence very similar…we have a second post on a 45 degree angle with fishing line tied to it as well. We’ve enjoyed great success thus far. I’m certain there are some deer walking about with wire cutters but they haven’t shown up yet. Great video…this fishing line fence works and its cheap.

    • @nycooper3802
      @nycooper3802 Před rokem

      Hi, I’m currently trying to fence my garden. Can you explain the second post at the 45degree angle. Thanks

  • @MJ-he1hf
    @MJ-he1hf Před 3 lety +3

    Thank you for this video! We have feral deer in Australia, introduced in the 1800s just add to the many wild animals we already have to contend with :) haha. I have been trying to figure out a cheap way to protect my veggie patch from our marauding deer. Thank you for explaining your system and allaying all my fears! :)

  • @chrisparker7400
    @chrisparker7400 Před 2 lety +2

    I did this to keep hawks out of my chicken run. I strung it along top of run from post to post. Works wonderfully as long as you make sure there’s no gap 3-4 ft wide.

  • @fortheearth
    @fortheearth Před 3 lety

    Thanks for posting this great system. Happy Gardening 2021!

  • @1andonlyBruce
    @1andonlyBruce Před 3 lety +9

    Plant some strawberries and you will find that deer can jump 8 ft or more from a standing start. Our deer, at least, really like those strawberries!

    • @markdwilkins
      @markdwilkins Před 3 lety +5

      It's not a matter of how high the deer can physically jump. The point is that they are hesitant to jump something that they cannot see.

  • @sqwrrl
    @sqwrrl Před 7 lety +14

    I did this around my blueberry bushes and so far so good. No more nibbled foliage.

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 7 lety +4

      Thanks for adding this comment. Really do think it is a quick, easy, and effective solution to the problem.

    • @mississippigardener987
      @mississippigardener987 Před 2 lety

      I tried it last year and it didn’t work! Had it 1’ apart, they put their head through then jump in

  • @charlesburkhart800
    @charlesburkhart800 Před 4 lety +3

    We did this about 6 ft level, above black plastic mesh fencing on the top of a wood fence with rebar pounded in the post to take it to about 6-7 ft tall. The deer only came in during the rutting season when there were 6 of them together. They jumped back out pretty quickly. We made repairs and they didn't come back. Our regular deer population (they come by our back lot 2 times a day) stay out. Fishing line, who would have thought! Also, neighbors can't see the black plastic mesh netting so HOA doesn't get after us.

  • @bobaloo2012
    @bobaloo2012 Před 4 lety +3

    Did the same thing, but with electric fence instead, 8 runs a foot apart. The deer went right through it, barely slowed then down. Tenax black plastic fencing is easy and actually works.

  • @mtpokit
    @mtpokit Před 7 lety +3

    I like JE's vids and yours too. I did this and it kept the deer out for sure, but not the woodchucks, rabbits, etc.

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 7 lety

      Yes, in another section of our garden, the fishing line kept out the deer, but the rabbits got in and ate all of our young bean plants. We're experimenting with some cheap alternatives to keep rabbits out around the bottom.

    • @charlesroberts3910
      @charlesroberts3910 Před 3 lety +3

      I’ve trapped many ground hogs with my live trap and relocated them . But I could never trap one of those wascally wabbit. They are too smart . I couldn’t understand how the bait would disappear and no wabbit until one day I watched a wabbit hop in the trap over the trigger plate , eat the bait and hop back over the trigger and back out. Then I got one on video cause my wife didn’t think they were that smart but I showed her the video and she believed. So I gave up on the rabbits. The first fence I put up was chicken wire and I saw a rabbit squeeze right through one of the holes. I put up a rabbit proof fence then they dug underneath it . I guess I’ll just have to plant enough for all of us

  • @RustyFinch
    @RustyFinch Před 7 lety +3

    In our local area there is a gardener who put orange flagging tape on their fence to be sure it could be seen in low light. The same kind tree companies use to mark trees. It's very light and blows in the wind.

  • @johnradford2258
    @johnradford2258 Před 4 lety +10

    This clever idea FAILED miserably to protect my one apple sapling.
    I enclosed an apple sapling with 6.5-foot tall fencing, close enough that deer cannot jump over (they'd bee in effect jumping into a "well" of fencing) but far enough away that they could not reach in without stepping inside the enclosure.
    Turned out, my one lone deer (left behind the migration to higher forests and meadows), being very desperate (eating all kinds of natural but very undesirable vegetation elsewhere), managed to step partially through my enclosure so it could place forefeet on the ground and ease it's head through and then reach up 5+ feet to get at every last leaf!
    In the morning, the fencing was in tact, undamaged and a mystery. The apple, utterly stripped. I got the culprit on video (2AM).
    My problem was I had a plastic chicken wire type fencing around the tree from 2 feet up to 5 feet (works great but did not have enough) and the fishing lines, at 6-8 inch intervals, below and above the impenetrable fencing. The deer first drank up all the water I'd left for birds and my 2 rabbits and then wormed its way into the enclosure (barely) and then eased up to the top of the tree, and stripped it and then eased out, leaving a mystery had I not seen the video. Took it all of 2 minutes to destroy my tree.
    The fishing line kept the animal from totally entering the enclosure but still allowed partial entry and devastation. This is the third attempt at enclosing this plant! I think it may not recover again this year if ever. I may now be about killed.
    Anybody need venison? I'm ready to kill this damned creature. Alas, hunting season is still 2 months away.

    • @chelead2266
      @chelead2266 Před 2 lety +1

      Stinking deer. Rock salt in a shotgun works great! It won’t mortally wound it and the salt will go on stinging for a while. The deer in our area (and coyote and black bear) learn quickly from it!

  • @sherrytucker7102
    @sherrytucker7102 Před 4 lety +6

    When I built my garden fence, I installed 42" rabbit fence on 8' wood posts specifically so that I'd have room later on for a taller fence (money was tight at the time). I ran 3 strands of fishing line above the rabbit fence (spaced abt 8" apart) and it has worked perfectly for 3 seasons so far. I DO have to replace the line every other year as the sun does break it down eventually, though.

  • @georgelamb8074
    @georgelamb8074 Před měsícem

    I use bamboo and tie bells to the top of the bamboo. They’re very flexible every time they touch the ring works perfect.

  • @stevegermain1222
    @stevegermain1222 Před 4 lety +2

    I'm wrapping apple trees with five foot fencing and then I'm going to go around the whole area with the fish line fence I'm glad it works for you hopefully it will for me

    • @neal0071234able
      @neal0071234able Před 4 lety +2

      Use woodline trees as fence posts with ring screw anchors and fishing line.. You can fence in an acre sized lot with this concept and cost would be less than 10 rolls of fishing line and a bulk buy on screw hook anchors in the hundred count boxes..

  • @saintisidorehomestead
    @saintisidorehomestead Před 7 lety +3

    Thank you, brother. Can't beat the price, or the simplicity, of that deer fence. Garden looks great. And, we farm under St. Isidore Homestead LLC, how cool! Blessings.

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 7 lety

      Wonderful, another under the patronage of our dear St. Isidore! Thank you for all of the kind words and taking the time to comment. Blessings to your and your!

  • @nathanrogers8713
    @nathanrogers8713 Před 5 lety +3

    Probably the difference between the white tail you have and the pacific black tail we have, but we got to watch our local deer go through the v style gate without issue at our neighbors house. They tried using the lines after there was a mishap (big buck inside garden got spooked and crashed through their 7 ft high welded steel fencing that it failed to jump snapping the 3 inch posts off at the ground across one entire side of the garden) we watched them carefully step through the lines. I think they used jute string though rather than monofilament.

  • @MyTerrytunes
    @MyTerrytunes Před 4 lety +5

    It seems like a good idea...so I tried it according to your recommendations and measurements. So for about 2 months it worked the deer left my garden alone. Well I must have the smartest deer in Georgia because they figured it out. I watched them approach the fence and and simply step right thru. Guess I will have to revert to solar powered electric fence.

    • @ArbitraryLifestyle
      @ArbitraryLifestyle Před 4 lety

      We have an electric fence around our garden and it stands at 6'3"... the deer have just started jumping over it to eat our corn. Fucking things, grrrr.

  • @larrymoore6640
    @larrymoore6640 Před 5 lety

    Good video. Good exp explanation of project including approximate cost.

  • @danhat1473
    @danhat1473 Před 3 lety +7

    I've got a 6 foot high fence. They still jumped it. Adding 2 feet to it this year. Lol

    • @dennistaylor3796
      @dennistaylor3796 Před 3 lety +2

      We had a 12 foot fence they jumped. We took it to 18 feet and we saw them jump it like nothing.

    • @Queen-jc8fd
      @Queen-jc8fd Před 3 lety

      Lolololol xDDD

    • @Ang.0910
      @Ang.0910 Před 2 lety

      Did it work? Did u try adding a line 2 feet in front of the wire fence 2 ft off the ground? That makes the fence 3d and it confused them for me with no issues

  • @alan30189
    @alan30189 Před 7 lety +1

    Cool stuff! Thanks for the idea.

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 7 lety +1

      Thanks for the comment - hope it works for you as well as it has for us if you give it a try.

  • @fergferguson7370
    @fergferguson7370 Před 4 lety

    Excellent idea.

  • @SasquatchBioacoustic
    @SasquatchBioacoustic Před 7 lety +5

    I've done this around my kitchen garden for the last three years, and it works great. My T posts are only 4 feet tall and I run just two strands, 20 and 40 inches high. It doesn't work for bunnies, but the deer steer clear of it.

    • @kristinak1972
      @kristinak1972 Před 6 lety +2

      For the burrowing critters and bunnies you can run chicken wire around the base of the fence. For 6' poles, I used the 2' wire with the 2" holes as it was cheaper. Affixed it with aluminum wire on a roll to the t-posts or zip ties. I put a foot against the 't' posts, a foot on the ground and buried part of it in dirt. That way when the deer step on it they also sense something weird under hoof and back off. Its a 100' x 30' garden. You can always get the 1' wire for your application.

  • @jennycolavito
    @jennycolavito Před 4 lety +7

    I would like to try this. Could you explain the Y shape gate idea in more detail?

  • @AA-kf7uf
    @AA-kf7uf Před 4 lety

    so far so good for me too!

  • @nancyjm79
    @nancyjm79 Před 5 lety

    Thank you. I'm going to try it. Do you think lower lines will keep the neighborhood ground hog out?

  • @thomasmyers2893
    @thomasmyers2893 Před 3 lety

    So far this has worked for me. Although I tried using 10' conduit. As posts, that has not worked well.

  • @mrutkowski07
    @mrutkowski07 Před 3 lety +9

    Update on your review after a full season?
    Great idea, thinking about this in my garden.
    Thanks!

  • @chilacontigo3359
    @chilacontigo3359 Před 4 lety

    Thank you for the information

  • @terramuffett7805
    @terramuffett7805 Před rokem

    We are using a pallet on two heavy duty hinges, connected to the corner post for a gate!

  • @sandrarichardson2713
    @sandrarichardson2713 Před rokem

    I will try to get a read through on all the comments...but possibly for a faster answer...what about rabbits? Anyone have a cheap way to keep rabbits and smaller thieves out of the garden?
    This was a good, simple, short and to the point video. Thanks for taking the time to share and your results. Jesus bless.

  • @TheTrOlOs
    @TheTrOlOs Před 3 lety

    They will figure out for sure

  • @JohnDoe_88
    @JohnDoe_88 Před 5 lety +2

    That's what I had in mind to do I don't see why it wouldn't work and what deer would try jumping over something they can can't see

  • @privateuploads-geo2625
    @privateuploads-geo2625 Před 3 lety +3

    Great info... Use barbless wire instead of fishing line?
    so on reading the comments below it seems that in some locations or times of year the deer get through fishing line... I just called tractor supply: they have barbless wire, 12.5 guage @1320 feet for $72.99, and 10' T posts for $10.99 each. If you have a 20 x 40' garden, that is 120 lineal feet. If you use 10' Tposts 1' in ground, you have 9' or 108" above ground. If you wrap every 4" with wire, that is 27 rows (108'/4'= 27 rows of wire); 27rows x 120' lineal ft = 3240', so you would need 3 bundles of wire at $219 total, and about 7 or 8 T Posts at around $100: overall cost would be about $350 with post hammer. I may give that a try as we have lots of deer... thank you commenters for your feedback, as that gave me this idea.

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 3 lety +1

      Definitely a better and relatively inexpensive long term solution. Also, easy to electrify if you're not opposed to such things.

    • @nycooper3802
      @nycooper3802 Před 2 lety

      Hello, checking to see how this ended up working for you? Thanks!

    • @privateuploads-geo2625
      @privateuploads-geo2625 Před 2 lety

      @@nycooper3802 it kept deer out, but not rabbits, gohpers, squirrels, who knows what else....

  • @ourhomesteadinthepines9931

    I loved this idea as well and so did it at my garden. I couldn't find a large quantity of 30# but did find 50# mono. I did it every 6-inches up to 6-feet. It worked well for awhile. The white tail deer then figured out they could push on it and actually duck through it and even some found they could chew on it enough to break it. So this fall they've totally overtaken our garden....

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 5 lety

      Interesting - thanks for taking the time to share that. Our challenge this year was rabbits, which this fence does nothing to stop.

  • @troitimtam2333
    @troitimtam2333 Před 7 lety +2

    This totally works! We like our little deer family, and we were looking for a solution that was environmentally-friendly, inexpensive and safe for small animals. We have a couple of cats, squirrels, possums, birds & lots of other wild animals on the property. I watched both vids yesterday (the original by JEofWV and yours), purchased the t-posts & 30-lb fishing line, and rigged up a quick temporary fence to keep them out last night. We sunk two 7-ft Tposts 24 feet apart (between our house and a 6-foot redwood fence). The ground is sloped, so we ran the bottom line about 12-inches off the ground (10 inches from the ground at the lowest point, 15 inches at the highest). Then, we strung the bottom 3 rows approx. 6 inches apart (as recommended in your video), with the top 3 rows about 12 inches apart. The finished height was 53 inches from the ground. This is a temporary fix, and today we will hang a new fence further out to include our citrus trees. The posts will be about 9 feet apart. Great solution! Thank you so much.

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 7 lety +1

      So happy to to hear this worked for you as well! Thanks for taking the time to share feedback and your results. Blessings to you and yours!

    • @hectorbart
      @hectorbart Před rokem

      Is this still working for you for keeping the deer out? Would love to hear an update.

    • @CameoFarmer
      @CameoFarmer Před 8 měsíci

      Have you had any trouble with animals getting tangled in it? I don't want to cause a new issue, but I really like this idea. Antlers tangling? Other animals?

  • @mrjackson6327
    @mrjackson6327 Před 5 lety +7

    Ever have any issues with birds getting caught in the line? We always were bummed with how much the black fences caught dragonflies and small birds

  • @fredsanford3621
    @fredsanford3621 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you for the video. How do you keep rabbits out?

  • @jo-anngotzon9334
    @jo-anngotzon9334 Před 2 lety

    Great idea. Guess what? Your alwsys going to get the critics. I like the idea we in in the ccountry , deer country.

  • @marthaconover4460
    @marthaconover4460 Před 5 lety +1

    Food for thought. I need to keep deer out of a 3/4 acre area which is surrounded by large pines on one side, black willows on another. I don't want to fence directly up against these dense tree lines, but thinking that running fishing line through the trees might deter the deer from cutting through them into my orchard. Thanks:)

    • @drewvandegrift177
      @drewvandegrift177 Před 2 lety +1

      I have the same thought. It should work, and we can use the trees as t-posts.

  • @fieldsong
    @fieldsong Před 2 lety

    Thanks. How did you tie the fishing line?

  • @cayennemist
    @cayennemist Před 3 lety

    I was just about to consider this for my garden, then it dawned on me. We also have Bear, and they would have a field day with this just to be spiteful.

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 3 lety

      Ha! Yes, doubt this would do more than annoy them.

  • @NoferTrunions
    @NoferTrunions Před 3 lety +1

    My neighbor is feeding the deer and they are eating my plants. However, I have the largest yard in the neighborhood which has become a deer highway over the decades. I'm thinking of stringing a fence across the middle of my hard to shutdown their path. My thought was stretched alum clothes line and invisible deer/bird netting (usually $40 for 14x75') strung over the line like shower curtains. When I want to cut my grass, I'll just slide the netting off to the side, With 14' wide netting, I can make that aluminum line over 12' high at the lowest sag point.
    NOTE: I am thinking of just letting it hang off the line with the bottom just laying on the ground. It might be better if 2-3' of the netting lays on the ground rather than just reaching the ground.
    I cannot imagine what is going to go through their little squirrel brains when they realize they can't browse through my yard!

  • @JimmyFloridatube
    @JimmyFloridatube Před 2 lety

    I am going to try something like, but instead I am using bailing wire about a foot apart. It is a lot stronger and even cheaper than expensive fishing line. I am just trying to keep out deer, because we don't have many coons or possums around here and no ground hounds I know of.

  • @hal7ter
    @hal7ter Před rokem

    The Dooley Homestead channel video show this but with three feet outside this fence, a three foot step on post with one filament around - it has a 3D effect and confuses the deer. Look it up - it makes perfect sense and no one says it does not work.

    • @hal7ter
      @hal7ter Před rokem

      It is like a shorter fence outside the main fence that has two strands.

  • @ulandthomas6773
    @ulandthomas6773 Před rokem +1

    30 lb. mono worked for a while. But the blackeye peas were too tempting. By October, they were simply "busting" through the mono line twice a week. I put up a camera and unfortunately watched them regularly.

  • @ArbitraryLifestyle
    @ArbitraryLifestyle Před 4 lety +5

    We have an electric fence that stand 6'3" and the deer jump it ALL THE TIME.

  • @maryeg412
    @maryeg412 Před 9 měsíci

    what knot do you use to tie off the fish line?

  • @lujitsu1251
    @lujitsu1251 Před rokem

    Excellent.
    I wonder if you still think this is a good fence and if there are any countermeasures or updates???

  • @kimberleebell98
    @kimberleebell98 Před 3 lety

    Will it keep out moose? Probably not strong enough or high enough.

  • @brentowens8248
    @brentowens8248 Před rokem

    How far apart did you space the fishing line?

  • @matticus6339
    @matticus6339 Před 3 lety

    This kept deer out of our garden for a few months but now they manage to get it without even messing up the fishing line so they must be jumping right over it and jumping back out.

  • @anotherrant6688
    @anotherrant6688 Před 4 lety

    Excellent. Saves a lot of hassle and money. If it works, why go more elaborate and expensive?

  • @ulyanakoshelap9511
    @ulyanakoshelap9511 Před 4 lety +4

    I’m hoping to tackle the bunnies and the deer by putting a very short (visible) fence (I’ll probably buy something from Home Depot), for the bunnies plus do what you did for the deer. What do you think about that? Might look silly, but I’m hoping it’ll keep bunnies and deer out 😅

    • @sandrarichardson2713
      @sandrarichardson2713 Před rokem +1

      How did things work out for the bunnies? I believe this method will work for the deer but I also have the smaller thieves who want to take my plants instead of growing their own. Rabbits, possums, squirrels and raccoons. Thanks and Jesus bless.

  • @charlescoker7752
    @charlescoker7752 Před 3 lety +2

    The manufacturers know how to formulate steel so it will last a long time. But choose to make cheap steel so it will fail. Good to here. The T Post manufacturers still make their post out of Good Steel.

  • @gregbrucks9710
    @gregbrucks9710 Před 5 lety +1

    How many feet apart are t-post

  • @Rikkcas
    @Rikkcas Před 4 lety +1

    Great idea! Any information on the longevity of that kind of monofilament line?.. approximate..?

  • @INSTACRUISING
    @INSTACRUISING Před 6 lety

    That’s really great!! What about smaller animals like rabbits, etc?

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 6 lety +2

      You would have to put something else around the t-posts for rabbits. Someone else commented about setting fabric erosion fence (cheaper than metal fence) inside the fishing line fence - a good idea - reason being that the deer would see the erosion fence and try to jump over it into the fishing line. Would be better for the deer to walk into the fishing line BEFORE they could even get to the erosion fence.

  • @francinequail7370
    @francinequail7370 Před 2 lety

    Any suggestions for rabbits and groundhogs?

  • @juliendrouinb
    @juliendrouinb Před 6 lety

    Do you think 5/8" rebar of 6' with 1' in the ground would be as strong as T-bar ?

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 6 lety

      If that is what you have, try it. Big thing is just that the deer not be able to easily push it over.

    • @nathanrogers8713
      @nathanrogers8713 Před 5 lety +2

      While rebar is strong, the T posts have the strength advantage in this case as they are engineered for lateral strength where rebar is designed as a reinforcing material. At 6 foot, you are going to get a lot of flexing and bowing where an 8 foot T post because of its shape is not likely to bend much.

  • @George-nx5lo
    @George-nx5lo Před 5 lety +7

    should have put a camera to watch their reactions, I bet it was funny

  • @gail1684
    @gail1684 Před 4 lety +2

    how many animals have gotten hung up on this? that is my concern.

  • @gail1684
    @gail1684 Před 4 lety +1

    why is having the deer see the line first a bad thing? wouldn't that prevent them from trying to get through?

  • @stevegermain1222
    @stevegermain1222 Před 4 lety +1

    I live on a pond and try this technique around my tomato garden and a pesky little chipmunk keep chewing the bottom line out I guess he didn't see the video

  • @didmooretheundone2299
    @didmooretheundone2299 Před 4 lety +3

    What if some persistent deer takes a jump anyway and gets all tangled up in the fishing line.

  • @michelleremmey
    @michelleremmey Před rokem

    Does this do anything at all to deter smaller animals like rabbits, etc, even if you have really close lines along the bottom? We live the woods with a large and active population of deer, but also rabbits, moles, turkey, fox, raccoon, etc.

  • @solitaryairborne
    @solitaryairborne Před 7 lety +1

    what was your post spacing? Here at Bushels And More Farm in Maine we have a serious deer issue. We are figuring fence for about 3 acres.

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 7 lety +3

      Phew - don't envy you having to put a fence around three acres! We had posts spaced to 50' in several places in the garden. One recommendation that I would make that I didn't say in the video is to tie off the line at each post. This way if the line breaks for some reason, you only lose the protection for 50', not for a much longer run.

    • @solitaryairborne
      @solitaryairborne Před 7 lety

      Thanx so much for the response! Yea, I had thought about tying off at each post as well, but you just confirmed it for me. 50' isn't bad at all. I was originally thinking 20' myself. Pretty sure I can do it in a weekend. IIt sure beats digging holes, setting posts, etc. We have an apple orchard down from me who did that. What a job, and expense!

  • @mikeyt51386
    @mikeyt51386 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you for the video! I want to try this on my garden. We live in the woods in the UP and have tons of deer. Have you tried this as a long term solution? Do the deer eventually figure out how to get through?

  • @brentjohnson6654
    @brentjohnson6654 Před 4 měsíci

    Since this is 6 years ago, do you still recommend this style of deer fence?

  • @whip205inthebam3
    @whip205inthebam3 Před 2 lety

    Deer can jump over an 8 foot fence it's just a matter of how bad they want what's on the other side. They will also dig under a fence if at all possible.

  • @mzzmary1
    @mzzmary1 Před 6 lety

    I apologize if someone's already asked, but I just did this yesterday and tied a string of cans for calamity in the middle of mine. Should I take that down? Also, how close together does the line have to be?

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 6 lety

      I think a possible problem with the cans will be that the deer can see them - and therefore that there is something there. The idea behind this fence is that it functions a bit like a force field. Not in the sense that they can't possibly break through it (they can), but that they walk into it, can't see it, and can't figure out how to go through, around, or over. We ran the lines about 10" apart. Hope this helps!

    • @robertobinkyman
      @robertobinkyman Před 5 lety +3

      I saw another video where the guy had fishing line going around his garden, but with cans at one end on a bucket. That way, the deer push the line, the cans move, the deer get spooked by the noise and run away. Great idea in my opinion.

  • @12vLife
    @12vLife Před 4 lety

    1:10 spool of 30# monofilament fishing line.... Not about deer.. How long do you think that like will last in the Florida Sun and Rain? Think it will last longer better than 18ga tarred nylon mason string? I see you looped, did you also tie?

  • @portugeeprepper6821
    @portugeeprepper6821 Před 7 lety +1

    Maybe I'll give this a shot to protect my young fruit trees. Tfs

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 7 lety

      We're going to do the same thing. We have an older apple tree on our farm that we have been trying to "restore." Last year it finally produce a number of apples, and in one night the deer came and ate every one. So we're getting the 10 foot T posts to protect them.

  • @dmt543nerd
    @dmt543nerd Před 4 lety

    Do you think this would still deter deers if I put a 2 ft bunny fence in bottom, but still followed up with fishing line every 6 inches up to 6-7ft?

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 4 lety

      As an update, this fence does work for the most part - meaning that it does keep deer from just daily going in and eating everything in the garden. Unfortunately, we had instances where they broke the fishing line and got into the garden and ate some sweet potato leaves. We simply replaced the line and it kept them out for the remainder of the growing season. Over time the line also deteriorates from the sun and becomes more brittle. So it's not a fool proof system - just a quick and cheap one if time or money are an issue. Next step up would be t-posts (fast and easy to install) with wire (that could also be electrified).

    • @lankydude
      @lankydude Před 2 lety

      I just did same exact thing- we’ll see

  • @MC-hiker
    @MC-hiker Před 2 lety

    I have tried this system repeatedly for the last few years. It simply has not worked. The deer maneuver through it, even at 12” or less apart. I have seen them on more than one occasion wiggle their bodies in between the lines. Also, the lines do break. I have used 30 lb and heavier line.
    I have since switched to deer netting. It is almost like a screen door - barely noticeable. It seems to be working well.

  • @scotthugheshesshughesminis8926

    Thank you we planted some fruit trees and we have had deer eating there new branches so we are going to go around. Each tree 🌳 7 trees in total give it a try. I noticed you have a Missions shirt on very cool I have a ministry too on you tube been seeing miracles out on the streets where I’m from Port Angeles Wa anyway check us out and thanks for the Video

  • @el3389
    @el3389 Před 4 lety

    i have this fishing line fence up now. it is not working at all.

  • @chrisparker7400
    @chrisparker7400 Před 2 lety

    How do you keep rabbits out Fromthe garden🤔

  • @ptcruiser2012
    @ptcruiser2012 Před 6 lety

    Hi. Is this still working for you? Did you ever come up with anything to keep the rabbits out? Did you do the gate the way you showed in the video?

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 6 lety +1

      It is still working, but we hope to put in a permanent fence around the entire garden soon. The fishing line fence really only works for deer. You would have to put something else up for rabbits around the bottom - but you could do something smaller at the bottom for rabbits and the fishing line above for deer. As to the gate, we ended up just using a piece of fencing tied on one side to a T post - simple solutions.

    • @ptcruiser2012
      @ptcruiser2012 Před 6 lety +2

      Yes, I have been thinking about this a lot and have read everyone of the comments on this video. I am a site and paving contractor by trade. I have also read where deer have a problem with rationalizing 3 dimensional situations. A fence is two dimensional as it pretty much can be drawn on an x, y plane. I don't know if it was in your comment section or elsewhere that I read that someone had put up a 4 ft fence on a 45 degree angle towards the outside of the enclosed perimeter and that the deer would not jump over it because they could not negotiate the 3rd dimension. I have read where others have put a 2 ft 2in gapped chicken wire along the bottom but my concern is that the deer would jump this not even thinking about the fishing line. The though occurred to me that if I placed the 2' high fence 2-3 ft inside the fishing line perimeter using erosion control fabric style staking that this would effectively keep the deer from trying to jump and keep the smaller critters at bay since the deer would touch the fishing line before they got to the small critter barrier. This would create the 3 dimensional confusion for the deer and they would simply not attempt to go any further. Just a thought but it might work. By the way I live in Apex, NC but have a farm in Yanceyville, NC. Also I am a Knight of Columbus and attend church at St. Mary Magdalene in Apex. On the old side at 59 with 5 children and 5 grandchildren. I love to watch your videos and can see that God has truly enriched your whole life and that that light is showing to the community around you. God bless. Please keep sharing. It is inspirational in so many ways that it is too hard to count.

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 6 lety +1

      Paul, first, thank you for your kind words - wonderful to hear from a brother Knight. And congratulations on your new church - was there recently for Deacon John Hubisz's funeral.
      As to the fence, I think all of what you say is very right, and your idea for how to inexpensively keep out rabbits with erosion fence/fabric is a great one. Setting it back inside the fish line fence is great. I will say we had dear get through the fishing line one night - broke some lines - and ate some sweet potato leaves. But we replaced the next morning and keep them out the remainder of the growing season. It's not completely deer proof, but for a quick and relatively inexpensive (non-permanent) solution, it really is largely effective. Blessings to you and yours!

    • @ptcruiser2012
      @ptcruiser2012 Před 6 lety

      Back at you! Tell your son to save me some of those transplants! Need a list of them to pick the ones I would like. Would love to come and visit some day to pick up the transplants, meet the future farmer of America and see the greenhouse. I want to build one just like it. Although I have an excavator, a skid steer and a kubota tractor so I won't have to do what you did to dig your hole for your geothermal battery.

    • @ptcruiser2012
      @ptcruiser2012 Před 6 lety

      Oh and I forgot. Vivat Jesus!

  • @charlesroberts3910
    @charlesroberts3910 Před 3 lety +1

    I think I’ll extend my t posts with cheap pvc pipe and use my 60 lb mono fishing line I’m not gonna spend a fortune on fencing

  • @hals816
    @hals816 Před 4 lety +1

    Why is it important that the deer not be able to see the line??
    Do you think this is a better solution than using chicken wire? I know the chicken wire will be somewhat more expensive, but I'm wondering if it will work better so the trade-off will be worth it.
    Oh, also.... I can't imagine this successfully keeps rabbits out??

  • @CameoFarmer
    @CameoFarmer Před 8 měsíci

    Question: what about the risk of deer getting antlers stuck? I really want to try this, but I'm concerned about entrapping deer. Thoughts?

    • @jasonkadela6204
      @jasonkadela6204 Před 3 měsíci

      Any deer that would get antlers stuck in fishing line would more than easily be able to break free from the line.

  • @tammygillettVictoryGarden

    Do you have bears. I have them in my yard multiple times a week and would like to keep them farther back in our yard. Our neighbors have bird feeders that they wont take down so the bears are always going through our yard for them. I want to deter bears, yes if there is something in my yard they want they could get through (which we keep our yard free of garbage, seed, etc) but they go the path of least resistance.

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 6 lety

      We do not have bears in our area, but seriously doubt this fence system would keep bears out. But I suppose you could try it with some heavier fishing line.

    • @nathanrogers8713
      @nathanrogers8713 Před 5 lety +2

      Electric fencing would be best for bears. Honey growers often use it with success to protect their hives. Bears will ignore the fishing line and walk right through. They are inclined to force it until it hurts them or it gives way.

    • @marthajf73
      @marthajf73 Před 4 lety

      I just put up a 6 foot privacy fence which, of course, bears can get over in a second, but hopefully, they would go around to the neighbors birdfeeders. FYI: In some areas, birdfeeders are not allowed due to high bear populations.

    • @tammygillettVictoryGarden
      @tammygillettVictoryGarden Před 4 lety

      marthajf73 our fence has helped a lot.
      Our area is known for bears and DEEP just asks people to take down feeders in spring summer months.

  • @brianchrisman4331
    @brianchrisman4331 Před 4 lety

    I did this system and the first few weeks were great but unfortunately now it doesn't keep any of the deer out...😥

    • @dbashani
      @dbashani Před 3 lety

      Thanks for sharing. Do they break the line, or do they know how to get in and out?

    • @brianchrisman4331
      @brianchrisman4331 Před 3 lety

      @@dbashani Yes they break the lines and they jump over it. It worked literally a week and a half

  • @billchaffin4177
    @billchaffin4177 Před 2 lety

    better to use 15lb line... less chance of deer seeing line.... what they push against and can not see, they will not jump. I have been using this for several years and it works great. Had three bucks bedding next to my garden and they never ate my vegs

  • @PaulArveson
    @PaulArveson Před 6 lety

    OK this has been up a year now. How is it working? All I see on these videos are anecdotes, no data on success rate vs. deer traffic, failures and their causes, etc. If it is not effective, it doesn't matter how cheap it is.

    • @StIsidoresFarm
      @StIsidoresFarm  Před 6 lety +3

      We have used this fence in several locations and it has worked great. Lots of deer traffic - tracks on ground gong around the fence. We did have one night where it seems a deer broke some of the line. It was in a section with the greatest distance (48') between posts so lines were looser. Deer ate some sweet potato plants. Put in a post midway and repaired line. No more deer. Hope this helps.