Thanks for the how to video. Followed your instructions exactly and now my cat and dog are able to play in the backyard all day together. Cost $225 for the whole project, and that covered 200’ of pvc chicken wire fence. Excellent solution !
Best solution. There's a constant debate over indoor cat vs outdoor cat, and being on the outdoor side this is the best "best of both worlds approach I've seen. We build safe enclosures for other animals, so why not for cats. Both safety AND access to the outdoors.
Yes. Tried this. But where it goes wrong is its easy for other cats to get into your garden and then they can't get out...and then they freak out, fight you in a panic as you try to get them out. Rollers stop both in and out access. OR you have to have a piece of this fence that you can open, chase the gate crashing local nosy puss out!
Good job. I wish everyone with cats would do this - the kitties stay safe from traffic and won't cause drivers to brake harshly / swerve in the road and neighbours will be able to enjoy their own gardens without the horrible daily task of cleaning cat muck off their shoes, children's toys, car pedals, gravel drive lawns & flowerbeds. Thanks for the video.
ehm...i'm sorry, have you owned cats? they are usually pretty discreet about their poo. you are not gonna be finding them relieving themselves on children's toys. lawns and flowerbeds sure. i have owned outside cats for years and haven't encountered this army of poo you describe.
@@kushpaladin300 all cat owners seem to think theirs don’t stink or that it evaporates like magic up, up and away out their darling kitty’s arse. Ignorance is bliss I suppose. Cats are meat-eating predators and their faeces is noxious with parasites that can scar human eyes, especially children. My own eyes have childhood scarring yet none of my family has ever owned cats. It’s been a daily task removing cat faeces from my garden for decades. “They bury it” Erm no. 2mm of sand by flicking their paws a couple of times. Three houses in my small street have two cats each plus several local roaming / strays. They leave a lot of 5hit. Kids roll a ball / scooter / tricycle / sandpit in their own garden… it gets smeared in cat muck. You choose to ‘own’ predatory meat-eating animals, you should keep your pets on your own property. You probably have no idea how much your clean, responsible neighbours secretly resent you and your lazy “not my problem mate, cats gonna cat” selfishness.
@@kushpaladin300 there is always a naysayer who knows for a fact what their cat does and doesn't do while they are not monitoring that cat in other people's yard. Everyone has seen dead cats in the road. Letting them outside to play in the road is animal abuse. It's also animal abuse to allow them to kill or try to kill anything smaller than them. Thanks for your anecdotal story, but mine are more personal to me. I am allergic to cats and will not tolerate them in my space. I may have to put up this kind of fencing to capture them inside my yard, then we will see who wins that argument.
Thanks so much for this video. I’ve been researching and when I saw your idea I knew it was the one because we have the identical fence situation as you! We put the chicken wire across the top of the posts and it worked very well, blends in so you can’t see it at all and was easy to do. We did put pvc rollers and brackets on our two gates. Thank you thank you from us and especially from our cat Cooper who is enjoying his full yard catio!! He is one lucky guy!!
This cat barrier has kept my cat in my yard successfully! But mine is a bit of a scaredy-cat so it doesn’t take much to keep her from jumping the fence. But the other day another cat got in and was having a bit of a hard time finding it’s way out. Eventually it was scared enough that it jumped up a piece of lattice work I had leaning on my fence and scrambled out.
You’re welcome! Yes! This is definitely a budget friendly solution to keep your cat safe! After I saw the prices of the other products on the market I had to come up with something more cost effective! Thanks for watching!
I found this looking for a solution to keep my backyard chickens from flying over a fence. They haven’t tried yet, but worried they might. I was shocked at how much those systems cost! This is a great solution and is more attractive in my opinion with the wood supports. Heck, you could even create a trellis on one end and have a climbing vine on it to even make it blend in more. I think I’ll try this!
Yeah those fence barriers are expensive. That was my motivation to come up with a more affordable solution. It’s been working great with my cat. Hope it does the same for your chickens! Thanks for watching!
Thank you for this! I've also looked at the companies that make the cat fencing but I live in Canada and it's even more expensive to buy it and have it shipped here!
You’re welcome! Yeah I was frustrated at how costly the cat barrier solutions were on the market. But I’m very happy with my DIY chicken wire method. Definitely gives me a sense of relief that I don’t have to watch my cat all the time or worry she’s going to jump over the fence!
You’re welcome! I’m glad you enjoyed my video! I definitely want to keep my cat safe and the cat barrier I put up works to keep her in my yard! Thanks for watching!
I had good neighbours so I cut the 2 x 4's on 90 degrees so it tiltled up a bit. This method, combined with noise and spray bottle training worked great for me.
I definitely doing this but can you explain the black pvc? Is that purchased that way or is it like painted onto normal chicken wire? I thought black pvc was a large plastic sheet roll?
The black chicken wire comes that way. There’s a link in the provided in the description. It’s the same type as the silver chicken wire but they coated it in black PVC from the factory. Hope this helps!
Love this video thank you! I like having the view and comfortability of my back porch without netting so I was looking for an option to prevent my cats from jumping on my porch railing. They’re old and I’m worried they will slip/ miss the jump! Thank you so much!
Thank you so much for this video, you did a great job of explaining/showing all of the steps ... we have a brand new orphan kitty that I am bottle feeding... we have a large backyard like you (~ 1/2 acre) so I have been quite discouraged while looking for solutions to keep him safe. The pre-fab kits would cost over 5k to do our whole fence 😑 but this video gives me a big dose of hope! I'm showing this to my husband 😃
Yeah I wasn’t about to spend thousands of dollars to buy a cat barrier for my fence! The solution I showed in my video has worked great to keep my cat in my yard. Hope you have success with yours! Thanks for watching!
Thank you for this advice. Our cats have always been outdoor cats and do like to explore beyond our backyard on occasion but lately there is a huge issue with coyotes in our area and so I am anxious to keep our cats safe by only allowing backyard access where it is still safe during the day. It’s bad enough they cannot go out at all in the dusk or dark but I would like to give them a safe daytime place to hang out and this might provide them with some freedom within our stricter guidelines.
Well done, I have researched this method for a client who has indoor cats and wants me to build a cat friendly enclosure. I wondered if 4 to 5mm stainless steel cable could also do the job and have better aesthetics. Either way, good effort, to foil the jumping felines.
I think there are other materials similar to the chicken wire that might look better. Of the top of my head I think I’ve seen similar netting but in a square pattern that looks a bit more elegant than chicken wire. The barrier I installed has definitely helped keep my cat in my yard.
I love this so much! It's very clever, aesthetically pleasing, and it shows how much you really care about your babies!Unfortunately I live in an apartment, so I'm not allowed to drill into the outdoor stucco walls. Recently the strays in our area have jumped over our patio wall and have marked their territory in several spots. I can't sit out there and enjoy myself anymore because of the smell, and I'm afraid I'll track in whatever diseases they could be carrying on my shoes or clothes to my indoor cat. Yes, she's fully vaccinated, but you never know. I'd rather be safe than sorry when it comes to my precious baby! We're also not allowed to cover our patios with anything that can't be seen through. So I was thinking if I could somehow hang chicken wire on the outside of the opening to our patio so that they can't jump on top of the outer wall, that would be perfect. I don't know the dimensions right now, even though I've measured it before, but I guess you could say it's like a "windowless" window or opening with a 3 to 4-ft wall that's 8 ft wide. I've noticed that the strays have peed on the interior patio walls while on the ledge of the outer wall, if that makes sense. I need to keep them from jumping up on it somehow. I want to douse everything in vinegar, a neutralizing cat pee spray, alcohol, bleach, whatever it takes basically, and then rinse everything off with a hose. Some items that are out there I can get rid of, but some I'd like to keep, like a few outdoor cushions, and the outdoor rug that's still fairly new. Idk. This is very frustrating. Even though the landlords don't allow us to do a lot of stuff to it, there is a maintenance guy who builds screens with wooden frames that just pop right into the "window" space. He's not supposed to be doing it, but he's offered, and since there's no drilling involved, I think the landlords turn a blind eye. We need to track him down and ask him how much he would charge. The only problem is I've seen his own screened in porch (for his cats) with a torn corner. So I'd really rather use chicken wire. Honestly? I wish I could just put in a glass window and call it a sunroom! We live in the desert so it would also keep out all the dust! If things weren't so expensive right now, we would love to buy a house, even if it was just a tiny shack.
Hopefully you find a solution that is temporary and not too noticeable by your landlord! My cat barrier has kept my cat in my yard really well. But she’s also a bit of a scaredy cat so it doesn’t take much before she runs back into the house.
@@rosiejimenez3953 Well, if you have neighbors on that side, of course you'd need permission. I only have neighbors on one side of my property... but luckily, they don't actually live there (vacation property, summer only). Maybe they'd be glad if you do both sides bc it'd keep them out of their yard, too 🤞😺🤞
This is so clever, I'm loving it! 💞 Elegant and cost effective. I have a little black cat from neighbor that is terrorizing my wild birds and using my fenced yard as a litter box and knocking over a tray feeder with costly bird seed. This solution will prevent the cat coming in, but allow squirrels free access on top of fence as usual. Best of all, its easy to do. I have a nice grapevine that will cover the top as well so it will look like an arbor trellis. Brilliant solution and very well documented. Thank you for no music, praise god! You have a gorgeous long haired Bengal cat. I love this type of cat. I am from Bengal! The striped tabby cats are the smartest and most communicative of cat breeds. Very sociable and intelligent and good natured. You made a good selection here. Some advice I give all cat owners from my years of cat and dog rescues because the vets don't: Feed cats raw ground beef and sardines. They need this, which is why they hunt. Other cooked meats like pork and chicken are also good. Fresh ground carrots, cabbage or kale, chopped up lettuce in their meat. Cooked eggs, Greek Yoghurt. Vitamins and Fish Oil such as Iceland Pure Sardine and Anchovy Oil (not Salmon oil which no cat, dog, human can digest but bears can). This fresh food diet will lower hunting needs. Lowered hunting means less reason to leave your compound. Fish Oil gives them a sleek, glossy coat, heart, eye, liver, organ health, and lowers shedding. Some Vitamin B's also help with hair shedding and good coat, and finally a pinch of MSM powder (sulphur) is excellent for coats, skin, and strong nails. Ditto for humans. Plant fresh grass of some kind in a patch and let it grow tall. Pick a tender, fine variety. Eating grass allows the cat to throw up hairballs. Most yards do not have grass or it is mowed too low. How about wheat grass? Bathe your cat often during summer months - at least monthly and use a curry brush to get out dead fur. Then when shampooing rinse and conditioner rinse, use a cat slicker brush (Petedge.com) to get wads of hair off that would otherwise end up in the gut. Finally, blow dry them using a dog blower (Amazon $100) that is more air compressor than a blower. Don't use hair dryer. You want air velocity not heat. The blower literally blows out water and dead hair from pets, leaving them super clean and all dead hair gone. Wrap up cat head so no noise for their sensitive hearing. Give them once a year, Egg Yolk Lecithin 600 mg 2 x day with food for one month every year. Lecithin is natural. It dissolves fat in the body, and thereby shrinks the fat around the hairballs in every cat's gut. In 2-3 weeks, they will excrete massive hairballs that have been sitting around for years making their digestion poor. My 19 yr old cat threw up 3 massive cigar hairballs after only 2 weeks of Lecithin. Only use Egg Yolk Lecithin, not Soy or Sunflower. Dogs and humans can have all 3 kinds. Give your cat Thomas Labs Bio Case Plus which is an Enzyme/Probiotic formula that will aid digestion and clear material in bowels effectively. Once the hairballs are shrunk down, a bit of Magnesium powder or laxative will clear them out. Only give any laxative after one month of Lecithin use. The Enzymes are useful for rescued animals, seniors cats, young kittens, etc. Use daily or occasionally as needed. This will give you magnificent cats with zero health issues. If you spay and neuter, roaming will cease. Tip: I buy bulk Magnesium and Potassium powder from Amazon as minerals for myself and two little dogs. A pinch in your pets food prevents mineral deficiencies of two important minerals. For humans, esp men, 50 mg Zinc every night is also recommended. Give cat pinch of Pot/Mag once a day, and for humans, take 1/4 tsp twice a day mixed in water with Apple Cider Vinegar. Marvelous for energy and workouts too. No more leg cramps or dehydration on hot days.
I saw a video where a guy put up brackets and hung black pvc pipe along the top of his fence. looked good and the cats claws slide off it they cant grip on. simple and east to install.
Nice! I do have a dumb question. How exactly does it prevent a cat from escaping? When they reach the chicken wire, can they not go around it and over it?
Nice job, I suppose you don’t have trouble with cats coming into your garden, we have one cat visiting us every day, because we have a veranda and she likes to sleep there so I bought the iron studs with black mesh ,they are not cheap but it works very well.
I don’t have any cats coming into my yard. But raccoons and squirrels still come in. The squirrels are nimble and can jump from branches to the top of the fence. I think the raccoons are coming in from the gate section where I don’t have the barrier. But definitely no stray cats coming into my backyard.
Glad you enjoyed my cat fence barrier video! I believe it has kept other cats from coming into the yard. I haven’t seen another cat in my backyard in awhile. They do however walk along the top of the fence to get from yard to yard.
Yes! This cat barrier has successfully prevented my cat from jumping out ever since we put it up. But she’s also a bit of a scaredy cat so it doesn’t take much frighten her back into the house.
really like this idea and we're thinking of doing something similar, but our worry is: won't they be able to just jump onto that wire 'shelf' and climb out that over the fence that way?
How has this been working? I am going to be building a fence 8ft tall but will need to do something like this to keep them from climbing over the top. Shouldnt the horizontal pieces be maybe more like 2ft long?
The cat barrier I built has been working great. My cat hasn’t climbed out since. But also my cat is a bit of a scaredy cat so it doesn’t take much to scare her back from the fence. The 1 foot distance has been working. I don’t think there’s a need for it to stick out any further. The only part of my fence that doesn’t have the barrier is the gate but for me I don’t worry about that section as much since my cat for some reason doesn’t go to the gate much. But you can easily build this onto a gate as well. Hope this helps!
Nice. I'm wondering why you cat couldn't jump up to the PVC coated chicken wire and then go over the fence?. It looks flat enough to be a like a shelf.
My cat won’t jump up on the flat part of my cat barrier. We know she won’t do it so what I built in the video works for my cat very effectively. Plus she’s a bit scared of some noises outside. Other cats that have more outdoor experience might not be deterred.
Hey, thanks for the video we have been doing the same in our garden - did you run into any difficulties stopping the wire mesh from sagging between the brackets? That's the only thing we aren't quite 100% happy with the job we've done, any tips?
I don’t have an elegant solution for keeping the wire mesh from sagging. But on some parts I took a thin wire and connected it to the sagging part and used a small nail on the fence to support the mesh and keep it mostly straight. I used the thin wire that was in the mesh roll that was used to keep it rolled up. It’s thin enough that you almost can’t see it. Hope this helps!
Great idea!! I was also wondering how you keep your kitty in the yard if there are escape routes at ground level though! How did you secure the ground level perimeter? Thanks! 🙏
I think in the areas where I have the barrier on the fence it keeps other cats out. But I do have a small section on one side of my yard where the gate is installed. I don’t have a barrier in that section. So technically animals can get in and out in that area. I’m pretty sure raccoons come into my backyard at night because at times there are holes dug in my lawn or plants messed up. Also squirrels come in no problem by jumping into the bushes next to the fence. But it has kept my cat in since I put the barrier up.
When we let our 2 cats into fenced garden we go out with them and follow them around. When one climbs the fence we tell him to go down. But as soon as u blink and do not tell him to go down he is gone. They have medallions with phone number attached to the harness just in case
Yeah I had to try to keep my mostly indoor cat safe. So far she has not been able to get out of the yard with the DIY cat barrier I installed. Easy and cost effective! Thanks for watching!
You could use a masonry drill bit and concrete screws to build the 2nd type of cat barrier shown in the video. Use the same 2x4s and fence brackets. But you have to be comfortable drilling into your concrete/brick wall. Hope this helps!
I plan to create a garden that i need out cats, and other animals to stay out of. Luckily i live in a place the cats can roam free more or less and we dont have to worry about the cats going squish.
This cat barrier definitely keeps my cat in my backyard. And I would say for the most part it has kept other cats out of my yard. The only part of my fence that doesn’t have this barrier is on my gate. And maybe once I saw another cat in my yard. So for me with only 98% coverage I’d say it’s very effective for keeping other cats out of the yard too. Hope this helps!
I bought a 50 foot roll of chicken wire that is I foot wide. I suppose you can mount the 2x4 the other way but this is the typical way it is mounted for a fence. And the orientation matches the other 2x4s on the fence. Thanks for watching!
I connected an electric fence to mine. It stopped cats, birds, raccoons, squirrels, possums and even people from jumping into my yard. Well not the birds.
Hi that first one looks sloppy and not 100% safe for the cat.. The 2nd piece looks good and neat and a cheap idea too , well done👍 You still have to make a fence for the conifers that are near your fence. The cat can jump on the fence via the tree. As you say cats are curious they can ignore it 10 x and the other x is hit.
I definitely agree that the first version looks sloppy! It was my first attempt and I had to get it up fast when I discovered my mostly indoor cat jumped over the fence twice. So that one went up quick. The other side I had more time to think about a better looking solution. My backyard is now surrounded by the chicken wire. Behind my arbor vitae trees I used the first method because no one can see behind it. That way my cat can’t find a hidden spot to jump out. This cat barrier has successfully kept my cat safe and in my yard! Thanks for watching!
I have not seen another cat come in my yard but raccoons have been in (I think) at rare times. They probably get back out from the gate area where I don’t have this barrier up. Or maybe they climb up a tall wood trellis on part of my fence where there isn’t a barrier.
It's kept our rescue kitties safe for 20 years. Highly recommend this. Thanks for getting the word out!!
Thanks for the how to video. Followed your instructions exactly and now my cat and dog are able to play in the backyard all day together. Cost $225 for the whole project, and that covered 200’ of pvc chicken wire fence. Excellent solution !
You’re welcome! Glad your furry friends can now play in your backyard now! Thanks for watching!
Best solution. There's a constant debate over indoor cat vs outdoor cat, and being on the outdoor side this is the best "best of both worlds approach I've seen. We build safe enclosures for other animals, so why not for cats. Both safety AND access to the outdoors.
Yes. Tried this. But where it goes wrong is its easy for other cats to get into your garden and then they can't get out...and then they freak out, fight you in a panic as you try to get them out. Rollers stop both in and out access. OR you have to have a piece of this fence that you can open, chase the gate crashing local nosy puss out!
GOOD REMARK!!! Thank u so much, we have other cats coming to us often
Couldn't you put the wood and PVC on both sides of the fence to stop cats from entering as well?
Thank you, I've been looking for a cheap solution that still looks neat. I'll be using this design well done 👍
Good job. I wish everyone with cats would do this - the kitties stay safe from traffic and won't cause drivers to brake harshly / swerve in the road and neighbours will be able to enjoy their own gardens without the horrible daily task of cleaning cat muck off their shoes, children's toys, car pedals, gravel drive lawns & flowerbeds. Thanks for the video.
You’re welcome! Doing my best to keep my mostly indoor cat safe! Thanks for watching!
ehm...i'm sorry, have you owned cats? they are usually pretty discreet about their poo. you are not gonna be finding them relieving themselves on children's toys. lawns and flowerbeds sure. i have owned outside cats for years and haven't encountered this army of poo you describe.
@@kushpaladin300 all cat owners seem to think theirs don’t stink or that it evaporates like magic up, up and away out their darling kitty’s arse. Ignorance is bliss I suppose. Cats are meat-eating predators and their faeces is noxious with parasites that can scar human eyes, especially children. My own eyes have childhood scarring yet none of my family has ever owned cats. It’s been a daily task removing cat faeces from my garden for decades. “They bury it” Erm no. 2mm of sand by flicking their paws a couple of times. Three houses in my small street have two cats each plus several local roaming / strays. They leave a lot of 5hit. Kids roll a ball / scooter / tricycle / sandpit in their own garden… it gets smeared in cat muck. You choose to ‘own’ predatory meat-eating animals, you should keep your pets on your own property. You probably have no idea how much your clean, responsible neighbours secretly resent you and your lazy “not my problem mate, cats gonna cat” selfishness.
@@kushpaladin300my cat will go for any garden bed with loose dirt amd the street cats will literally shit right in my grass
@@kushpaladin300 there is always a naysayer who knows for a fact what their cat does and doesn't do while they are not monitoring that cat in other people's yard.
Everyone has seen dead cats in the road. Letting them outside to play in the road is animal abuse. It's also animal abuse to allow them to kill or try to kill anything smaller than them.
Thanks for your anecdotal story, but mine are more personal to me. I am allergic to cats and will not tolerate them in my space. I may have to put up this kind of fencing to capture them inside my yard, then we will see who wins that argument.
I definitely like the look of the second setup. Thank you 😺
You’re welcome! Yeah the 2nd example is definitely the better looking solution! And both have been very effective for keeping my cat in my backyard.
Thanks so much for this video. I’ve been researching and when I saw your idea I knew it was the one because we have the identical fence situation as you! We put the chicken wire across the top of the posts and it worked very well, blends in so you can’t see it at all and was easy to do. We did put pvc rollers and brackets on our two gates. Thank you thank you from us and especially from our cat Cooper who is enjoying his full yard catio!! He is one lucky guy!!
You’re welcome! Glad this solution is helping to keep your cat safe! Thanks for watching!
Shes ADORABLE and worth it!
Wonderful & what a pretty baby!!!
You are absolutely the BEST with this idea. Thx for sharing it with everyone. On my way to keep my cats safe!!
I'm impressed. Job well done & looks good.
Thank you very much for this helpful video. It was just what we needed to keep our kitty from escaping into the neighborhood.
So glad I could help you keep your cat safe and at home in your yard!
So glad I found this video! My kitties are getting bored inside and I was looking for a way to safely let them out into my backyard.
This cat barrier has kept my cat in my yard successfully! But mine is a bit of a scaredy-cat so it doesn’t take much to keep her from jumping the fence. But the other day another cat got in and was having a bit of a hard time finding it’s way out. Eventually it was scared enough that it jumped up a piece of lattice work I had leaning on my fence and scrambled out.
Love this, easy simple and doable on a budget. Thank you
You’re welcome! Yes! This is definitely a budget friendly solution to keep your cat safe! After I saw the prices of the other products on the market I had to come up with something more cost effective! Thanks for watching!
I found this looking for a solution to keep my backyard chickens from flying over a fence. They haven’t tried yet, but worried they might. I was shocked at how much those systems cost! This is a great solution and is more attractive in my opinion with the wood supports. Heck, you could even create a trellis on one end and have a climbing vine on it to even make it blend in more.
I think I’ll try this!
Yeah those fence barriers are expensive. That was my motivation to come up with a more affordable solution. It’s been working great with my cat. Hope it does the same for your chickens! Thanks for watching!
best one I have found yet on you tube, nice job and you give two options .. quick one and and a nice looking one ...
You’re welcome! This cat barrier works well with my cat. I don’t have to worry about her jumping out anymore. Thanks for watching!
Thank you for this! I've also looked at the companies that make the cat fencing but I live in Canada and it's even more expensive to buy it and have it shipped here!
You’re welcome! Yeah I was frustrated at how costly the cat barrier solutions were on the market. But I’m very happy with my DIY chicken wire method. Definitely gives me a sense of relief that I don’t have to watch my cat all the time or worry she’s going to jump over the fence!
Good job! Learned useful tips from this video and thank you for keeping your cat safe
You’re welcome! I’m glad you enjoyed my video! I definitely want to keep my cat safe and the cat barrier I put up works to keep her in my yard! Thanks for watching!
@@digitalcamproducer does it still work or has she figured it out yet? Don't you still have to watch her while she's out there?
Brilliant idea, thanks.
I had good neighbours so I cut the 2 x 4's on 90 degrees so it tiltled up a bit. This method, combined with noise and spray bottle training worked great for me.
I love! this idea. I've already spent so much $$$$ trying to keep my kitties in. Even had 7 big trees removes. I love this. This is next on my list.
I definitely doing this but can you explain the black pvc? Is that purchased that way or is it like painted onto normal chicken wire? I thought black pvc was a large plastic sheet roll?
The black chicken wire comes that way. There’s a link in the provided in the description. It’s the same type as the silver chicken wire but they coated it in black PVC from the factory. Hope this helps!
Love this video thank you! I like having the view and comfortability of my back porch without netting so I was looking for an option to prevent my cats from jumping on my porch railing. They’re old and I’m worried they will slip/ miss the jump! Thank you so much!
You’re welcome! Glad you enjoyed my cat barrier video! Thanks for watching!
Thank you so much for this video, you did a great job of explaining/showing all of the steps ... we have a brand new orphan kitty that I am bottle feeding... we have a large backyard like you (~ 1/2 acre) so I have been quite discouraged while looking for solutions to keep him safe. The pre-fab kits would cost over 5k to do our whole fence 😑 but this video gives me a big dose of hope! I'm showing this to my husband 😃
Yeah I wasn’t about to spend thousands of dollars to buy a cat barrier for my fence! The solution I showed in my video has worked great to keep my cat in my yard. Hope you have success with yours! Thanks for watching!
Thank you for this advice. Our cats have always been outdoor cats and do like to explore beyond our backyard on occasion but lately there is a huge issue with coyotes in our area and so I am anxious to keep our cats safe by only allowing backyard access where it is still safe during the day. It’s bad enough they cannot go out at all in the dusk or dark but I would like to give them a safe daytime place to hang out and this might provide them with some freedom within our stricter guidelines.
Well done, I have researched this method for a client who has indoor cats and wants me to build a cat friendly enclosure. I wondered if 4 to 5mm stainless steel cable could also do the job and have better aesthetics. Either way, good effort, to foil the jumping felines.
I think there are other materials similar to the chicken wire that might look better. Of the top of my head I think I’ve seen similar netting but in a square pattern that looks a bit more elegant than chicken wire. The barrier I installed has definitely helped keep my cat in my yard.
I love this so much! It's very clever, aesthetically pleasing, and it shows how much you really care about your babies!Unfortunately I live in an apartment, so I'm not allowed to drill into the outdoor stucco walls. Recently the strays in our area have jumped over our patio wall and have marked their territory in several spots. I can't sit out there and enjoy myself anymore because of the smell, and I'm afraid I'll track in whatever diseases they could be carrying on my shoes or clothes to my indoor cat. Yes, she's fully vaccinated, but you never know. I'd rather be safe than sorry when it comes to my precious baby! We're also not allowed to cover our patios with anything that can't be seen through. So I was thinking if I could somehow hang chicken wire on the outside of the opening to our patio so that they can't jump on top of the outer wall, that would be perfect. I don't know the dimensions right now, even though I've measured it before, but I guess you could say it's like a "windowless" window or opening with a 3 to 4-ft wall that's 8 ft wide. I've noticed that the strays have peed on the interior patio walls while on the ledge of the outer wall, if that makes sense. I need to keep them from jumping up on it somehow. I want to douse everything in vinegar, a neutralizing cat pee spray, alcohol, bleach, whatever it takes basically, and then rinse everything off with a hose. Some items that are out there I can get rid of, but some I'd like to keep, like a few outdoor cushions, and the outdoor rug that's still fairly new. Idk. This is very frustrating. Even though the landlords don't allow us to do a lot of stuff to it, there is a maintenance guy who builds screens with wooden frames that just pop right into the "window" space. He's not supposed to be doing it, but he's offered, and since there's no drilling involved, I think the landlords turn a blind eye. We need to track him down and ask him how much he would charge. The only problem is I've seen his own screened in porch (for his cats) with a torn corner. So I'd really rather use chicken wire. Honestly? I wish I could just put in a glass window and call it a sunroom! We live in the desert so it would also keep out all the dust! If things weren't so expensive right now, we would love to buy a house, even if it was just a tiny shack.
Hopefully you find a solution that is temporary and not too noticeable by your landlord! My cat barrier has kept my cat in my yard really well. But she’s also a bit of a scaredy cat so it doesn’t take much before she runs back into the house.
Any ideas on keeping other people's cats from jumping into your yard over that same fence?
Just do it on the other side?
@@tammyrawdon3587 You can't because that side is your neighbors side and not your property.
@@rosiejimenez3953 Well, if you have neighbors on that side, of course you'd need permission. I only have neighbors on one side of my property... but luckily, they don't actually live there (vacation property, summer only).
Maybe they'd be glad if you do both sides bc it'd keep them out of their yard, too 🤞😺🤞
This is so clever, I'm loving it! 💞 Elegant and cost effective. I have a little black cat from neighbor that is terrorizing my wild birds and using my fenced yard as a litter box and knocking over a tray feeder with costly bird seed. This solution will prevent the cat coming in, but allow squirrels free access on top of fence as usual. Best of all, its easy to do.
I have a nice grapevine that will cover the top as well so it will look like an arbor trellis. Brilliant solution and very well documented. Thank you for no music, praise god!
You have a gorgeous long haired Bengal cat. I love this type of cat. I am from Bengal! The striped tabby cats are the smartest and most communicative of cat breeds. Very sociable and intelligent and good natured. You made a good selection here.
Some advice I give all cat owners from my years of cat and dog rescues because the vets don't:
Feed cats raw ground beef and sardines. They need this, which is why they hunt. Other cooked meats like pork and chicken are also good. Fresh ground carrots, cabbage or kale, chopped up lettuce in their meat. Cooked eggs, Greek Yoghurt. Vitamins and Fish Oil such as Iceland Pure Sardine and Anchovy Oil (not Salmon oil which no cat, dog, human can digest but bears can). This fresh food diet will lower hunting needs. Lowered hunting means less reason to leave your compound. Fish Oil gives them a sleek, glossy coat, heart, eye, liver, organ health, and lowers shedding. Some Vitamin B's also help with hair shedding and good coat, and finally a pinch of MSM powder (sulphur) is excellent for coats, skin, and strong nails. Ditto for humans.
Plant fresh grass of some kind in a patch and let it grow tall. Pick a tender, fine variety. Eating grass allows the cat to throw up hairballs. Most yards do not have grass or it is mowed too low. How about wheat grass?
Bathe your cat often during summer months - at least monthly and use a curry brush to get out dead fur. Then when shampooing rinse and conditioner rinse, use a cat slicker brush (Petedge.com) to get wads of hair off that would otherwise end up in the gut. Finally, blow dry them using a dog blower (Amazon $100) that is more air compressor than a blower. Don't use hair dryer. You want air velocity not heat. The blower literally blows out water and dead hair from pets, leaving them super clean and all dead hair gone. Wrap up cat head so no noise for their sensitive hearing.
Give them once a year, Egg Yolk Lecithin 600 mg 2 x day with food for one month every year. Lecithin is natural. It dissolves fat in the body, and thereby shrinks the fat around the hairballs in every cat's gut. In 2-3 weeks, they will excrete massive hairballs that have been sitting around for years making their digestion poor. My 19 yr old cat threw up 3 massive cigar hairballs after only 2 weeks of Lecithin. Only use Egg Yolk Lecithin, not Soy or Sunflower. Dogs and humans can have all 3 kinds.
Give your cat Thomas Labs Bio Case Plus which is an Enzyme/Probiotic formula that will aid digestion and clear material in bowels effectively. Once the hairballs are shrunk down, a bit of Magnesium powder or laxative will clear them out. Only give any laxative after one month of Lecithin use. The Enzymes are useful for rescued animals, seniors cats, young kittens, etc. Use daily or occasionally as needed. This will give you magnificent cats with zero health issues. If you spay and neuter, roaming will cease.
Tip: I buy bulk Magnesium and Potassium powder from Amazon as minerals for myself and two little dogs. A pinch in your pets food prevents mineral deficiencies of two important minerals. For humans, esp men, 50 mg Zinc every night is also recommended. Give cat pinch of Pot/Mag once a day, and for humans, take 1/4 tsp twice a day mixed in water with Apple Cider Vinegar. Marvelous for energy and workouts too. No more leg cramps or dehydration on hot days.
Thank you for this information.
I have a metal fence. Cannot do that but i need something as 24 hour cat curfew here at Baw Baw Shire in Victoria Australia
I saw a video where a guy put up brackets and hung black pvc pipe along the top of his fence. looked good and the cats claws slide off it they cant grip on. simple and east to install.
elegant, effective. ✔ Nicely done!
We have the first method. But after seeing your 2nd..we will definitely do this!
😺😺😺😺
Thank you for this. I’m trying the 2nd idea. I just got 1ft black L shaped shelf brackets instead of 2x4s. I hope it works!
Did it work? I'd love to know the results.
@@ArdinVincent It does work.
The shelf brackets will tarnish and rust though!
@@anniefeng3795 the ones I got are coded metal
Nice! I do have a dumb question. How exactly does it prevent a cat from escaping? When they reach the chicken wire, can they not go around it and over it?
This looks great.
This video is great! Thank you so much!
That's fantastic - thank you!
You’re welcome! Glad my cat barrier video was helpful!
For lower fences can you go further out than 1 foot with wood? Would think it might need a support underneath as well
Love this. Gonna try
Nice job, I suppose you don’t have trouble with cats coming into your garden,
we have one cat visiting us every day, because we have a veranda and she likes to sleep there
so I bought the iron studs with black mesh ,they are not cheap but it works very well.
I don’t have any cats coming into my yard. But raccoons and squirrels still come in. The squirrels are nimble and can jump from branches to the top of the fence. I think the raccoons are coming in from the gate section where I don’t have the barrier. But definitely no stray cats coming into my backyard.
My cats would climb that tree and be out in a second
I'm afraid if a cat has a mind to get out, they will, eventually.
Thank you so much! This video helps a ton!
get job and great video. does the barrier stop other cats from getting into your garden?
Glad you enjoyed my cat fence barrier video! I believe it has kept other cats from coming into the yard. I haven’t seen another cat in my backyard in awhile. They do however walk along the top of the fence to get from yard to yard.
That's a great job
I'm going to give this a try. Thanks for the tips. Is your cat still being contained in your yard?
Yes! This cat barrier has successfully prevented my cat from jumping out ever since we put it up. But she’s also a bit of a scaredy cat so it doesn’t take much frighten her back into the house.
Thank you! This is so helpful!
Great idea!
Thanks! Yeah this wire mesh solution has helped keep my cat safe in my backyard!
Brilliant! Thank you!
Outstanding!!
Glad you enjoyed my cat barrier video!
It looks nice
really like this idea and we're thinking of doing something similar, but our worry is: won't they be able to just jump onto that wire 'shelf' and climb out that over the fence that way?
That's what worries me too. Some of mine cats are great climbers.
@@catara. we've gone for the upright angled braces/netting. not installed it yet, but hoping it works! 🤞
Your cat looks exactly like the one I'm trying to keep outta my yard...LOL!
SHES SO CUTE
Thanks! I love my cat!
This looks really nice. Great job. I don't know if you get snow, but if so, how does it hold up?
How cool!!
Thanks for this video.
You’re welcome! Glad you enjoyed my cat fence video! Thanks for watching!
Can they jump into yard from top? That's my problem, them coming in.
Thanks for this
💖💘❤️ please*, how would you attach to corners with privacy fence touching neighbors privacy fence~? Thank you*!*
How has this been working? I am going to be building a fence 8ft tall but will need to do something like this to keep them from climbing over the top. Shouldnt the horizontal pieces be maybe more like 2ft long?
The cat barrier I built has been working great. My cat hasn’t climbed out since. But also my cat is a bit of a scaredy cat so it doesn’t take much to scare her back from the fence. The 1 foot distance has been working. I don’t think there’s a need for it to stick out any further. The only part of my fence that doesn’t have the barrier is the gate but for me I don’t worry about that section as much since my cat for some reason doesn’t go to the gate much. But you can easily build this onto a gate as well. Hope this helps!
@@digitalcamproducer Sounds good and glad it has held up and kept your cat in. Thanks for the info.
Nice. I'm wondering why you cat couldn't jump up to the PVC coated chicken wire and then go over the fence?. It looks flat enough to be a like a shelf.
My cat won’t jump up on the flat part of my cat barrier. We know she won’t do it so what I built in the video works for my cat very effectively. Plus she’s a bit scared of some noises outside. Other cats that have more outdoor experience might not be deterred.
@@digitalcamproducer got it. Thanks for the explanation.
Hey, thanks for the video we have been doing the same in our garden - did you run into any difficulties stopping the wire mesh from sagging between the brackets? That's the only thing we aren't quite 100% happy with the job we've done, any tips?
I don’t have an elegant solution for keeping the wire mesh from sagging. But on some parts I took a thin wire and connected it to the sagging part and used a small nail on the fence to support the mesh and keep it mostly straight. I used the thin wire that was in the mesh roll that was used to keep it rolled up. It’s thin enough that you almost can’t see it. Hope this helps!
Great idea!!
I was also wondering how you keep your kitty in the yard if there are escape routes at ground level though! How did you secure the ground level perimeter?
Thanks! 🙏
land mines.
I want to do this. if shared fence, Did you need to ask neighbor ? (or give heads up) just curious
I didn’t ask my neighbor to tell him I’m was doing this. None of my neighbors can see the cat barrier on their side. And it’s very low key.
well done!
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed my cat barrier tutorial!
Do you remember where you got the coated chicken wire fencing?
I ordered the black pvc coated chicken wire from Amazon. I listed it in the description so you can get the exact same thing I bought. Hope this helps!
How tall is your fence? :) Just for reference
This looks doable! 🤔🤔 Any idea on how to cat proof the door that leads to thw front yard?? My cats have the nasty habit of goint to the front
Does this also prevent other cats from the neighborhood coming into your backyard?
I think in the areas where I have the barrier on the fence it keeps other cats out. But I do have a small section on one side of my yard where the gate is installed. I don’t have a barrier in that section. So technically animals can get in and out in that area. I’m pretty sure raccoons come into my backyard at night because at times there are holes dug in my lawn or plants messed up. Also squirrels come in no problem by jumping into the bushes next to the fence. But it has kept my cat in since I put the barrier up.
Did this continue to work? Did kitty start hopping onto the wood that sticks out?
This cat barrier works great with my cat. She has never gotten out of the backyard since I put this up.
Thank you ❤️
The loose chicken wire is good, tge more fixed method would support a lot of leaves.
But how to do corners and gates?
When we let our 2 cats into fenced garden we go out with them and follow them around. When one climbs the fence we tell him to go down. But as soon as u blink and do not tell him to go down he is gone. They have medallions with phone number attached to the harness just in case
This is the exact situation with my cat she’s no longer content with just our backyard
Yeah I had to try to keep my mostly indoor cat safe. So far she has not been able to get out of the yard with the DIY cat barrier I installed. Easy and cost effective! Thanks for watching!
Will this work on a low fence? Like 80 or 90 CM high fence?
Want to keep them out from my vegtable area in my garden.
No your cat can just jump over that
Nice 👍
What do you put on the gates?
Is this possible to do with a stone wall?
I have a brick wall, is there any way to do this on a brick wall ?
You could use a masonry drill bit and concrete screws to build the 2nd type of cat barrier shown in the video. Use the same 2x4s and fence brackets. But you have to be comfortable drilling into your concrete/brick wall. Hope this helps!
@@digitalcamproducer thank you!
Somewhere along the line, I read that cats don’t like anything that is a 45° angle
Sweet kitties
I plan to create a garden that i need out cats, and other animals to stay out of. Luckily i live in a place the cats can roam free more or less and we dont have to worry about the cats going squish.
does it also help keep cats OUT? i need to figure out how to keep my elderly kitties IN but all the neighborhood strays OUT
This cat barrier definitely keeps my cat in my backyard. And I would say for the most part it has kept other cats out of my yard. The only part of my fence that doesn’t have this barrier is on my gate. And maybe once I saw another cat in my yard. So for me with only 98% coverage I’d say it’s very effective for keeping other cats out of the yard too. Hope this helps!
Do you have any issues with your cat jumping onto the chicken wire then over the fence?
Is that net plastic or metal?
The netting is metal it is chicken wire with a thin plastic coating on it.
What breed of cat is she? We have a rescue that looks exactly the same
I don’t know what breed of cat mine is but she definitely has a unique and pretty coat.
Good idea but what about if other cats jump in to your garden? They gunna stuck in ur garden too lol
Yes! That’s definitely a possibility if another cat falls into your yard it might not be able to get out.
Shouldn’t the 2x4 face upwards? What length is the chicken wire? Love this
I bought a 50 foot roll of chicken wire that is I foot wide. I suppose you can mount the 2x4 the other way but this is the typical way it is mounted for a fence. And the orientation matches the other 2x4s on the fence. Thanks for watching!
I think the vertical way he did it will keep the wood from sagging over time.
What keeps the cat from climbing the tree and jump over?
I connected an electric fence to mine. It stopped cats, birds, raccoons, squirrels, possums and even people from jumping into my yard. Well not the birds.
It work great
What kind of wood is being used in this?
Looked like cedar to me.
I used the approach ( posts with wire) in this video and works really well
Hi that first one looks sloppy and not 100% safe for the cat..
The 2nd piece looks good and neat and a cheap idea too , well done👍
You still have to make a fence for the conifers that are near your fence.
The cat can jump on the fence via the tree.
As you say cats are curious they can ignore it 10 x and the other x is hit.
I definitely agree that the first version looks sloppy! It was my first attempt and I had to get it up fast when I discovered my mostly indoor cat jumped over the fence twice. So that one went up quick. The other side I had more time to think about a better looking solution. My backyard is now surrounded by the chicken wire. Behind my arbor vitae trees I used the first method because no one can see behind it. That way my cat can’t find a hidden spot to jump out. This cat barrier has successfully kept my cat safe and in my yard! Thanks for watching!
@@digitalcamproducer Hi and did the cat stay tidy in the garden?
what happens when a cat or racoon comes in from the outside?
I have not seen another cat come in my yard but raccoons have been in (I think) at rare times. They probably get back out from the gate area where I don’t have this barrier up. Or maybe they climb up a tall wood trellis on part of my fence where there isn’t a barrier.
@@digitalcamproducer You're missing my point. If a raccoon can get in and out. Your cat can get out and back in.
Does it stop other pets from jumping from the outside into your own yard?
You could in theory string those plastic bird spikes along the netting to deter other cats.
Nice job……looks good, too! And such a beautiful cat……MEOW!!💕
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed my cat barrier video.
I have chain link fences
what if a cat jumps in?