I put a 4" pvc pipe on the top of the fence. Makes it nearly impossible to 
scale as they have no traction to grab the top of the fence. I can further 
elaborate if anyone is interested. 

Jann

Sent from my iPhone

> On May 4, 2014, at 9:50 AM, Michael Smith <mwsmotorspo...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> I finally saw it as some list-members described: a full grown coyote run up 
> to my 4.5 foot tall fence and just scale it. It was last night after a 
> previous night coyote attack that killed my two beloved miniature Pygmy goats 
> and harmed my toe other pygmys. The sheep were unscathed. I know lessons in 
> shepherding are hard-earned and I had been thinking about coyotes considering 
> last years June attack. This year I thought I was being safer. Had the 
> animals in the central pasture--which has no holes in the fence, the dog was 
> in the pasture next door. I had been letting her in with the ewes and goats 
> at night, but stopped doing it, since I have two ewes in a paddock that are 
> ready to lamb and I was trying to "not stress them out too much".
> 
> That was a mistake. 
> 
> So, after cleaning up the mess yesterday and figuring out one goat has a limp 
> and the other has a partially paralyzed tongue, I decided to move Sheila, our 
> dog's home, permanently with the ewes and goats.
> 
> I have one of those 1000 candle LED flashlights (which, while costing around 
> $80-100, I highly recommend--they go forever and look like daylight ) and 
> went out around 10pm as I had also at 9:00 and 9:30. This time, I was just in 
> time to hear Sheila growl and see a fully grown coyote lope up to the fence 
> and use just a few steps to scale it and hop over. 
> 
> Will simply making the fence straight and higher help? Or I was thinking of 
> doing something like prison fencing where the fence angles at a 45 degree up 
> higher and makes it so a climbing coyote would be almost upside down at the 
> top. 
> 
> http://wolfdogproject.com/fence/leanin2.jpg
> 
> Seems easier and safer than an electrical system along the top edge, which I 
> am thinking the coyotes might not mind a shock, if there's a good meal
> 
> Having the dog in there will certainly help, and I plan to try to lock the 
> animals in the smaller gated paddocks at night and also, amend their paddock 
> fencing so they go to the roof. Basically a box, for sleeping in. 
> 
> The other question, can people with a single burro or llama actually claim 
> they have never sustained an attack after getting the larger animal?
> 
> -MIchael, Perino Ranch Blackbellies
> 
> Sent from my iPad
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