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| Cage Safety Safety-related questions, ideas,... |
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![]() Attention: Last reply in this thread was more than 16 Month(s) ago. We strongly discourage bumping old threads without a reason. It may result in a wheek or a poo notice, if inappropriate. Thank you. |
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#1
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| Confused about chicken wire I was reading in one of the threads that you shouldn't use chicken wire for runs and things because a guinea-pig's head could get stuck. Does "chicken wire" mean the same thing in the US and UK, because the wire my runs were made from had a half-inch hexagonal mesh - even a new-born couldn't get more than it's muzzle through. Are there other problems with the finer meshes? (How about the thicker wires you sometimes see sold as "weasel-proof mesh" - tiny rectangles and tougher wire?) K. |
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#2
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| Re: Confused about chicken wire The main problem I see with chicken wire, even the smaller mesh is that the wire is so fine and it is very easy for an animal to stretch the opening and possibly choke themselves. Every so often, you hear of it happening. Hardware cloth is also very fine and can be used however, spend the extra for galvanized wire, ungalvanized, which is not dipped and sealed, can come apart at the weld points and can also give enough to allow a persistant head to get through and get hung up. I lost a rabbit in a run made of ungalvanized hardware cloth. I thought I was using the best option but found out differently. In my current runs I use, metal lath, which is used in tile setting. It is very strong, won't give or bend, and will last forever with no rusting or corroding. The downside to it is it is very sharp on the edges (as is most wire though) and I did invest in some wire covers that are like the ends you put on school reports to slip over all exposed edges which are all on the outside of the run. I love the stuff in spite of it being a little more expensive. I had the pigs out in the run, ran inside because the washer was off balance and there were two huge dogs tearing at my run but unable to get in, that superstrong wire was worth every cent to me then! |
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#3
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| Re: Confused about chicken wire Chicken wire - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia The usual hole is 1". I'll stick with cubes, than you very much. |
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#4
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| Re: Confused about chicken wire For any newbies looking over threads, you want what is called 'Hardware cloth' not chicken wire. (How about the thicker wires you sometimes see sold as "weasel-proof mesh" - tiny rectangles and tougher wire?) This does sound like hardware cloth. |
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