Snake Fence Installations and Updates

The weekend after a rattlesnake in a yard prompted an estimate for rattlesnake fencing, Jill found this Sonoran Gophersnake while taking measurements. While Sonoran Gophersnakes are not targeted by rattlesnake fencing, it's all a good indicator that this property is useful to snakes, and at least the buzzy ones will be prevented from visiting in the future.


I think our sales team will kill me if I keep posting photos of recent rattlesnake fence projects with how in-demand the service is right now, but I can't help it. This one out of Tucson is just perfect. That pool looks even better knowing the fence behind it will keep rattlesnakes out in the adjacent native habitat. Great work Nate and Michael.


Rattlesnake Fence must, beyond everything else, be functional. There is no next-best, no second place, or half measures – it's a fully secured perimeter or it isn't. This is why we are so strict with the situations and figures required to get the job done. There is much more going on than simply sticking metal to things :) Here's one recently completed by our Tucson team.


Rattlesnake fencing doesn't obscure the view of the outer property. At this place where our Tucson crew recently completed a job, you'd not know to look for it if you weren't told it was there.

A recent Rattlesnake Fence installation at a home in Tucson. At a height no rattlesnake can climb over and no space small enough even a new born can fit through, this summer will be less stressful than the last year for the homeowners and their dogs.

The modifications to this viewfence, made to keep rattlesnakes out of the yard, are just barely visible here. For the homeowner standing on the patio, it looks somewhere between invisible and a barely-seen gray haze. What they won't see, however, are rattlesnakes in the backyard. 


Even from this close, the rattlesnake fencing applied to this backyard is very difficult to see. It's easy to forget about, and so are the rattlesnakes that used to spend time hanging out on that shaded patio.


Newly applied rattlesnake fencing at this property in Tucson. Around the entier perimeter, no openings large enough for even the smallest newborn rattlesnake are allowed, including the gates.


An old gate gets some new tricks: materials added to prevent entry by rattlesnakes from the tiniest newborn to the oldest and largest adults.


A recently completed rattlesnake fence installation in Tucson. Each property has its own challenges, and others are more by the book. In each instance, the standards necessary to prevent a rattlesnake from climbing or squeezing in are the same, and we find a way.

Nathan and Michael did an amazing job on this new installation near Tucson. The amount of work that goes into properly installing rattlesnake fencing around a property like this is crazy. Soft soil and chain link fence are prone to rodent digging and erosion, so every bit of steel installed needs to be not only trenched in deep, but done so in a way we've figured out that stops rodents from even trying to get in.

A courtyard gate modified to keep rattlesnakes out. Brent used low profile and color matched materials to make sure the entryway looks just as good as before, but with some new tricks.


The view from a backyard that won't have any rattlesnake visitors. When even a short distance away, the materials used become almost invisible.

Bryan Hughes