Paul, I can sympathize with the fence dilemma.  The biggest troubles at our 
garden have been moose and vandalism.  There is nothing more discouraging than 
spending months growing a prize winning pumpkin or even worse, your family's 
food, only to arrive at your garden and see carrots and tomatoes thrown about 
and the pumpkin dashed to pieces.  I would much rather feed a mama moose than 
provide ammunition for a midnight tomato war.  We began to spend way too much 
energy on fighting off the moose and vandals.  Gardeners were getting so 
discouraged.  So we bit the bullet and built an 8 foot fence (moose can really 
jump!) with barb wire on top.  We cobbled together high gates and bought new 
locks.  It is a shame that we had to do this but we post the site coordinator's 
phone number on the gate and try to do a lot of Public Service Announcements so 
people know we are here and they can join us.  We also have a garden host,(our 
zucchini police!) similar to those camp ground hosts you see in 
 motorhome and live at the garden.  Gardeners feel safer, their produce is much 
safer and we have fewer vandalism problems.  We tried many things before we got 
to this point.  We tried gardening with the children in the neighborhood, 
giving them a garden and some help and seeds and starts.  (They brought their 
friends who stole our produce and vandalized the tool shed).  We tried bear 
hides and skulls to scare away the moose and gross out the vandals, planted 
raspberries around the perimeter of the garden, solicited a volunteer host, 
joined the Volunteers in Policing.  The police even put us on their rounds but 
to no avail.  Good fences make good neighbors.  The gardeners are happy and the 
drug dealers and their children aren't bothered by ranting gardeners 
complaining about missing cabbages.   Good luck in your garden,  Wendy 
Anderson,  Fairbanks Community Garden 
www.home.gci.net/~fairbankscommunitygarden 

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