This
weekend I needed to make a lectern to set on my desk in the office so
I can stand while I work, but I also didn't want to miss the planting
season so I made the prototype of a modular squirrel exclosure instead.
Why?
Squirrels have been sapping my will to garden. Margaret and I have enjoyed gardening the last couple of
years, but both the containers on her deck and our plot in the
community garden are ravaged by squirrels on a regular basis. It's
not just stealing produce when it's almost ripe, either. Whenever we work
in the garden, they seem drawn to the freshly-dug earth, because
within a day or two after we plant seeds or seedlings, squirrels come
through and re-dig the area. I have no idea what goes on in a
squirrel's brain, but my favorite guess is that new-tilled dirt looks
like some other squirrel might have buried an acorn there, so they
make sure there's nothing to be found. In the process, they uproot
our beet seeds or lettuce seedlings. If we were in the backwoods I could take care of this the old-fashioned way, but we're inside the city limits so I am forced to watch in impotent rage . . .
This
is quite demoralizing! So with some cheap fencing material and the
Kreg jig, here's what I did:
I brainstormed some ideas before I started.