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   ADDITIONAL INFO
Materials:


  • CCA treated 2x4s, 104 feet total, including two 12-foot and ten 8-foot sections, $46.80, at 45-cents per foot (prices may soon go up as wood treatments change)
  • Two sheets of BC or better plywood, $15 to $25 each
  • Two 8-foot x 25 1/2-inch corrugated metals sheets, $18
  • Hog panels, $12 each
  • 6x6-inch mesh concrete reinforcement wire, 52 cents per foot
  • Rebar, $4 per 20 feet
  • 1x1 1/2-inch welded wire, 48 inches wide, $1.70 per foot
  • Scott's Dog Supply dog house door, 11x16 inches, $25.95; floor panels, $27.95 each
  • Flooring for Fido


    By Larry Mueller


    Custom-build a kennel floor just right for your dog

    Mar 1, 2008


    Above-ground kennels aren't little jails. Rather, the kennel is a dog's bedroom and den, a place where a dog feels happy and secure. Kennel's aren't places for running-dogs exercise outdoors. Health-wise, an above-ground kennel keeps a dog away from most vermin and parasites, out of its own mess and off the damp, germ-laden ground. The kennel cage, however, needs just the right floor.

    The grating material must be strong enough to bear the weight of the dog and withstand the corrosive effect of the animal's urine. It also needs to be open enough to allow waste to fall or be pushed through properly spaced gaps. Openings too large allow feet to slip through; openings too small catch a dog's toes.

    What is perfect for one dog may not work for another. You need to select materials and building style based upon your dog's size and weight. These three different approaches for above-ground kennel floors should satisfy the needs of a variety of dogs and dog owners.

    Medium-to-Big Dogs
    For free standing above-ground cages (not attached to a building) to kennel pointing dogs, tree hounds and retrievers, I build a 2x4 treated-wood frame 43 inches or more wide by 39 inches high by 8 feet long. To prevent chewing, protruding surfaces should face outward, leaving all inside surfaces flush. The 4x4-inch treated stilts are 18-inches high. I add a single floor joist for support and two more front-end studs with a header to create a frame for a plywood door (see photo). The roof is galvanized corrugated sheet metal attached to the frame by 1 1/2-inch roofing nails.

    The dog house fills the rear opening of the framework. It should be high enough for the dog to sit up and wide enough to curl his body when sleeping. Again, all inside surfaces are flush. A Scott's Dog Supply spring-loaded aluminum door leading to the main space keeps out the wind (see photo). The floor grating can be hog panels (found at farm stores) or 6x6-inch mesh concrete reinforcing wire (found at building supply stores). Cut the material to size and staple it with fence staples atop the frame, like a deck, and then put over it a layer of 1x1 1/2-inch mesh welded wire.

    Hog panels are usually 16 feet long, 52 inches wide and made of 1/4-inch rods welded into 5 1/2x8-inch steel mesh. A 5/16-inch bolt cutter trims these materials to size much easier than a hacksaw. The hog panels can be used to make the kennel sides as well (see photo); staple them on the outside surface of the framing.

    A third method avoids the need for occasional welded wire replacements. Use 1/2-inch rebar (building supply stores) cut from 20-foot lengths and laid across and atop the frame to form a mesh with 1 1/8-inch gaps. Attach this with 1 1/2-inch roofing nails on either side of the bar ends. The floor grating easiest and fastest to install and most gentle on dogs' feet is a 43x24-inch welded and galvanized panel with 1 1/8-inch spacing between flattened rods, available from Scott's Dog Supply (800-966-3647). Side and gate panels are also available.

    Small-to-Medium Dogs
    I've kenneled beagles on unsupported 1 1/2-inch welded wire stapled across the frame. The wire lasts about two years, or possibly three to four years with support from hog panels or 6x6 reinforcing wire. If you use rebar, the spacing should be an inch for beagles and cocker spaniels, and 1 1/8-inches for springer spaniels.

    Little Dogs
    Terrier-type squirrel dogs such as feists and Jack Russels are too small, especially as pups, and far too quick in their movements to be safe on one to 1 1/8-inch-gap mesh. A plywood floor is safe, but terribly messy with these bouncy dogs. I build a frame of oak wood, which is resistant to chewing, with 1/2-inch mesh wire (called "hardware cloth" at farm or hardware stores) fastened across the framework with one-inch dry wall screws and washers large enough to cover the mesh. I put this over existing Scott's panels. Droppings that don't fall through can be pushed down or scraped when dried.

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    Comment on This Article

    At 7:58 PM, 2008-11-07, anonymous said:
    That's just cruel!! Dogs should be part of your family, not kept in a cage outside!!

    Flag this comment as offensive

    At 1:20 PM, 2008-10-21, unnone said:
    that looks so retarded why would you put your dog in a little thing like that???

    Flag this comment as offensive


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