Wednesday, June 3, 2026

How to Stop Animals Climbing Your Fence (Easy DIY Roll Bar

 Tired of animals getting into your yard? Learn how to install a DIY roll bar on your fence. This simple, humane, and effective barrier stops cats, raccoons, and other climbers from entering your garden, giving you peace of mind.


DIY roll bar installed on a wooden privacy fence to humanely stop raccoons and other animals from climbing into the yard



Why This Upgrade Makes a Big Difference

If you’ve ever looked out your window and spotted a cat, raccoon, or other agile visitor balancing on top of your fence like it’s their personal highway, you already know how determined animals can be. A standard privacy fence looks solid, but to a climber, it’s just another surface to grip and pull themselves over.

A roll bar changes that completely.

A roll bar (sometimes called a coyote roller) is a smooth, spinning tube that sits along the top of your fence. When an animal tries to grab the top rail, the bar rotates under their paws, removing the traction they rely on. They can’t climb, they can’t balance, and they eventually stop trying.

It’s humane, chemical‑free, and once installed, it works quietly in the background for years.

What You’ll Need Before You Begin

Readers appreciate knowing exactly what to gather before climbing a ladder or opening a toolbox. This list keeps the project simple and prevents mid‑project frustration.

You will need:

  • A roll bar kit (aluminum or stainless steel)
  • Mounting brackets that match your fence style
  • Exterior‑grade screws or bolts
  • A power drill
  • A measuring tape
  • A level
  • A ladder
  • Safety gloves and goggles

Optional but helpful:

  • Touch‑up stain or paint for the brackets
  • A wood sealer if your fence needs refreshing
  • Aromatic deterrent plants (lavender, rosemary, lemongrass, Coleus Canina) to plant along the exterior fence line once the installation is complete

Now that everything is gathered, the installation becomes a smooth, step‑by‑step process.

Step 1: Check the Condition of Your Fence

Before installing anything, take a slow walk along your fence line. A roll bar works best when the top of the fence is straight, sturdy, and securely anchored. If you notice loose boards, leaning sections, or warped rails, fix those first. A level surface ensures the roller spins freely and doesn’t bind or drag.

This quick inspection saves time later and gives you a clean, solid starting point.

Step 2: Measure and Mark the Bracket Locations

Using your measuring tape, measure the entire length of the fence where the roll bar will sit. Most roll bar kits recommend placing brackets every three to four feet. Use a pencil or marker to make small, clear marks along the top rail.

Take a moment to check your marks with a level. A straight line ensures the roller will glide smoothly from one end to the other.

Step 3: Attach the Brackets

With your marks in place, begin attaching the brackets. This is where your drill and exterior‑grade screws come in. Work slowly and keep your ladder stable as you move along the fence.

Each bracket should feel solid and secure. If one wiggles or shifts, tighten the screws or reposition it slightly. The brackets are the backbone of the system, so it’s worth taking your time here.

Step 4: Install the Roll Bar

Once the brackets are firmly attached, slide the roller tube into place. Most kits allow the tube to rest inside the bracket arms, and once it’s seated, you’ll immediately see how the system works.

Give the roller a gentle push with your hand. It should spin freely and smoothly. If it catches or drags, adjust the bracket spacing until the rotation feels effortless.

This spinning action is what prevents animals from gaining traction, so it’s important that the roller moves easily.

Step 5: Walk the Fence Line and Test the System

After the roller is installed, take a slow walk along the fence and test each section. Press lightly on the roller in several spots to make sure it spins consistently from end to end.

Look for:

  • Any brackets that need tightening
  • Sections where the roller doesn’t spin as freely
  • Gaps where the roller doesn’t sit evenly

A few small adjustments now will give you a long‑lasting, low‑maintenance system.

Step 6: Optional — Add Natural Plant Barriers

Once the roll bar is installed, you can enhance the system with a natural scent barrier along the outside of the fence. Plants like lavender, rosemary, lemongrass, and Coleus Canina create a soft, attractive border that animals prefer to avoid.

This step isn’t required, but it adds beauty and an extra layer of protection without chemicals or harsh repellents.

Tip

A roll bar on top and tidy landscaping below create a clean, effective, humane barrier that protects your yard without harming wildlife.

Final Thoughts

Installing a roll bar on your privacy fence is one of those upgrades that quietly pays off every day. It keeps animals from climbing into your yard, protects your garden and outdoor spaces, and gives you peace of mind all without traps, sprays, or confrontation.

Once installed, it simply works. And your yard finally feels like your yard again.

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

How to Keep Stray Cats Out: The Proven Fence Rollbar Method


How one overgrown garden became a neighborhood "cat resort"and the simple, humane DIY rollbar method we used to reclaim it. Discover how to keep stray cats out of your yard for good using a mix of structural changes, natural scent barriers, and strategic landscape design.

When a beautiful yard becomes a cat habitat

One of my clients had a gorgeous backyard: tall ornamental grass gardens, a koi fish pond, shade trees, and a full privacy fence. It was the kind of place you’d want to sit on a summer day cool, quiet, and peaceful. 

Unfortunately, the neighborhood cats felt the same way, turning her yard into a full-time "cat resort." After testing various methods, we discovered that the most effective, humane solution wasn't just repellents it was installing a specialized DIY fence rollbar to prevent them from entering in the first place.

Below, I’ll walk you through how we reclaimed this yard using a combination of structural changes and natural scent barriers.

“Overgrown backyard with koi pond, shade trees, and bird feeders where several cats lounge in tall grass—one dips a paw into the pond, another scratches a tree trunk. Text overlay reads ‘Is Your Yard a Cat Sanctuary? Learn How to Reclaim Your Yard from the Cats!’”


Cats are drawn to yards that offer food, shelter, safety, and comfort.
Remove those four elements, and you naturally reduce cat traffic without harming wildlife or the cats.

Why cats choose certain yards

Cats don’t wander randomly. They choose yards that offer:

  • Overgrown vegetation for hiding and hunting
  • Water features like koi ponds
  • Shade trees for cool resting spots
  • Soft soil or mulch for digging
  • Abundant prey (lizards, snakes, mice)
  • Safe enclosure from privacy fences
  • Bird feeders that attract prey activity

If your yard checks several of these boxes, cats will return daily.

Action steps to deter cats naturally and humanely

1. Remove all bird feeders

This is the single most important step.

Bird feeders attract birds → birds attract cats → cats return daily.
Removing feeders breaks the cycle instantly.

2. Trim overgrown vegetation

Cats love tall grasses, dense shrubs, and hidden tunnels.

  • Cut back ornamental grasses
  • Thin out dense shrubs
  • Remove brush piles
  • Keep mulch areas tidy

This removes hiding spots and reduces prey activity.

3. Reduce wildlife attractants

Cats follow the food.

  • Seal gaps under sheds and decks
  • Remove fallen fruit
  • Clean up spilled seed
  • Reduce standing water
  • Keep compost covered

Less prey means fewer cats.

4. Install a tall fence with a roll bar

This is one of the most effective long-term solutions.

  • Fence height: 6–8 feet
  • Add a roll bar (coyote roller): a spinning bar mounted along the top of the fence prevents cats from getting traction to pull themselves over.

Benefits:

  • Humane
  • Long-lasting
  • Works for raccoons and possums too
  • Doesn’t harm wildlife
“Tall wooden privacy fence with silver roll bar on top and a natural deterrent plant barrier along the exterior fence line, featuring lavender, rosemary, Coleus Canina, and lemongrass. Text overlay reads ‘Natural Fence Barrier for Cat Control – Aromatic plants + roll bar fence = humane, chemical‑free deterrent.’”


5. Plant a natural scent barrier along the fence line

Planting deterrent plants outside the fence line helps stop cats before they even reach the yard.

Best plants that repel cats

  • Coleus Canina (Scaredy Cat Plant): strong odor cats dislike
  • Lavender: aromatic oils repel cats and attract pollinators
  • Rosemary: woody texture and strong scent
  • Lemongrass: citrus scent cats avoid
  • Rue: bitter aroma
  • Pennyroyal: minty groundcover (avoid if you have pets that might ingest it)
  • Thorny shrubs (barberry, rugosa rose, holly): create a physical barrier

Plant these in a layered border outside the fence for maximum effect.

6. Use natural yard modifications

These are simple, humane, and effective:

  • Motion-activated sprinklers
  • Citrus peels or citrus spray along pathways and beds
  • Pinecones or river rock mulch (cats dislike the texture)
  • Block crawl-under gaps with stone or lattice
  • Remove cozy sleeping spots near ponds or under shrubs

These small changes make the yard less appealing as a cat hangout.

Case study: how we reclaimed the cat habitat yard

Here’s the exact plan we used for my client:

  1. Removed all bird feeders
  2. Trimmed the overgrown grass gardens
  3. Cleaned up wildlife attractants
  4. Installed an 8-foot fence with a roll bar
  5. Planted lavender, rosemary, and Coleus Canina outside the fence
  6. Added motion sprinklers near the pond
  7. Replaced soft mulch with river rock in high-traffic areas

Within two weeks, cat visits dropped dramatically. Within a month, the yard was peaceful again.

Humane cat deterrence works best when you combine scent, structure, and landscape changes.
No chemicals. No traps. No harm.

Final thoughts

You can keep stray cats out of your yard and garden naturally and humanely. The key is understanding why they’re coming  and then removing the features that make your yard a perfect habitat.

Start with the highest-impact steps: remove bird feeders, trim overgrown areas, and adjust your fence and plantings. Small, thoughtful changes can turn a “cat resort” back into the peaceful garden you intended.

Read my first article Keep Stray Cats Out of Your Yard here