Mesh prevents dogs from becoming escape artists
: We recently got a small dog and we keep him in the backyard. The problem is that he is able to squeeze through the bars of the wrought-iron gate on the side of the house. Some of the neighbors have installed a mesh across their gates to prevent their dogs from escaping. How can I go about this project?
A: I think the easiest solution is to feed your dog more food. Although it may take longer, you won’t kill an hour of your weekend.
A while back, I was doing some painting in the backyard of a customer’s house. Assigned to patrol that backyard was a pit bull named Moses. I would peek over the gate and whistle and, if Moses was there, he would come barreling around the corner.
Well, one time ol’ Moses decided to play possum. I whistled and no Moses. Thinking he was locked up inside the house, I confidently opened the gate and grabbed the paint. As I turned the corner, I saw Moses on the other side of the pool. Then I realized how he got his name. I swear Moses ran across the pool to come get me. I made it through the gate and the mesh prevented his saliva from drenching the back of my shoes.
You can buy pet screening or mesh at a home center for less than $20 and you can choose from a few different colors. If you have an extra large gate, you may have to buy a few pieces. This mesh also will offer some privacy from the street, as the holes are quite small.
Some mesh comes roughly 36 inches wide by 72 inches in length, so you will need to cut it before you attach it to the gate.
Be careful with this stuff because the edges are sharp. Use tin snips to cut the mesh. After you cut the sheet to fit your gate, the edges are downright dangerous.
You have a choice either to precut the mesh and screw it on the gate, or screw it on the gate first and then cut around the gate. If you choose to cut around the gate, the mesh will have the tendency to curl as you cut, which may cut you or Fido. Either way, you may want to wear heavy leather gloves when you handle it.
A must for this job is a drill driver fitted with a Phillips head bit. You also need self-tapping, pancake-head, galvanized screws, which eliminate the need to predrill pilot holes into the gate. A self-tapping screw cuts a hole as it holds the surfaces together.
Use clamps to hold the mesh to the top of the gate, but cover the jaws with wood scraps or something that won’t scratch the paint. Once you have it in position, put a screw in the drill and hold it up to one of the holes in the mesh. Choose either the upper left or upper right corner of the gate and a hole not too close to the edge.
Start slowly until the screw starts to cut into the gate and stop when the screw head holds the mesh snug to the gate. Align the rest of the mesh to cover the gate and add screws about every 8 inches along the top. Remove the clamps and continue down the gate making the bottom the last section to screw together.
If the interior bars of the gate allow, screw the mesh to them as well, otherwise every time the gate closes the mesh will bang against these bars.
If the gap between the sides of the gate and the wall are so large that Fido can fit through, you can screw a piece of angle iron to the gate, effectively widening the gate. This goes for the bottom of the gate as well. Just spray some paint on these parts to protect them from the weather.
Michael D. Klimek is a licensed contractor and president of Pro Handyman Corp. Questions may be sent by e-mail to: questions@pro-handyman.com. Or, mail to: 2301 E. Sunset Road, Box 8053, Las Vegas, NV 89119. His Web address is: www.pro-handyman.com.