
Dogs escape through gaps, weak gates, and fences that were never built with them in mind. We install pet fencing designed for the desert - right height, secure bottom edge, and gates that latch every time.

Pet and dog fencing in Twentynine Palms means choosing the right height for your dog, securing the bottom edge against desert soil shifts, and installing gates that close and latch on their own - most residential yards take one to two days to complete.
A lot of homeowners in Twentynine Palms discover their existing fence was never built with a dog in mind. Boards with gaps, latches that a dog can nose open, and posts that have shifted in the caliche soil all add up to a yard that looks fenced but is not truly secure. If you also want to give your dog access to a pool area safely, our pool fence installation can be combined with a dog enclosure to cover both needs at once.
We have been installing pet fencing in the Mojave Desert since 2015, and we know what the local soil, heat, and wildlife pressure demand. If you have coyotes in the neighborhood - which is common near Joshua Tree National Park - we will talk through coyote-deterrent options during the site visit, not after the job is done.
If your dog has gotten out once, they will try again. Dogs that have found a weak spot - a loose board, a gap at the bottom, a gate that does not latch - will keep testing it. One escape is a clear sign it is time to upgrade what you have.
Coyotes are a regular presence near the Joshua Tree National Park boundary. If you have spotted one in your yard or heard them at night, your current fence may not be providing the protection your dog needs. A fence too short or with gaps at the base will not deter a determined coyote.
Desert soil expands and contracts with temperature swings, and caliche can cause posts to move over time. If you can see daylight under your fence panels or posts are visibly leaning, your fence is no longer doing its job - these gaps are exactly where a small or medium dog will escape.
Many Twentynine Palms homes sit on large desert lots with no existing fencing. If you are bringing a dog home and your yard is open, you need a fence before the dog arrives - not after. Planning ahead also gives time to confirm permit requirements and choose the right material for the desert climate.
We install chain link, welded wire, wood, vinyl, and aluminum pet fencing - each suited to different dogs, yards, and budgets. Chain link and welded wire are affordable, durable, and easy to pair with a bottom-edge barrier that prevents digging. Wood gives you privacy alongside containment, and aluminum holds up beautifully in the desert sun without rust or warping. We also pair dog fencing with automatic gate installation so the entry closes and latches on its own - eliminating the most common escape route, an unlatched gate.
Every dog fence we build includes a conversation about your specific dog before we recommend anything. We ask about size, breed, jumping habits, and whether you have had any prior escape attempts. That conversation shapes the height, the post depth, the gate hardware, and the bottom-edge treatment. A fence sized for a Chihuahua is not the same fence a German Shepherd needs, and we do not quote them the same way.
Best for large yards where affordability and durability matter more than privacy.
Ideal for smaller dogs and garden areas where a lighter, flexible solution fits the space.
Suits homeowners who want containment and privacy together, with a natural look.
Best for desert conditions where low maintenance and UV resistance are priorities.
Two things make pet fencing in Twentynine Palms different from what you read about in national cost guides. First, the ground. Caliche - that rock-hard calcium carbonate layer in the Mojave Desert soil - requires specialized equipment to get through, adds real time to post-hole digging, and means posts need to be set correctly the first time because re-digging is expensive. Second, the wildlife. Coyotes are not a distant concern here; they move through residential neighborhoods regularly, especially in areas near the park. A fence that keeps your dog in also needs to keep coyotes out, which affects both the height and the bottom-gap treatment.
Homeowners in Joshua Tree, CA and Morongo Valley, CA deal with the same caliche and coyote conditions we see in Twentynine Palms - these are not rare edge cases, they are the standard for the high desert. We build every pet fence in this area with those local realities already factored in, so you are not learning about them after something goes wrong.
We ask a few questions about your yard size, your dog's breed and size, and any existing fencing. We reply within one business day and come to your property before giving you a final price.
We walk the full fence line, check for caliche near the surface, and look at slopes or obstacles. In Twentynine Palms this step matters because the ground conditions here vary from street to street.
We confirm whether your fence height requires a permit from the City of Twentynine Palms Community Development Department and handle that application before any digging starts. Permit processing typically takes one to two weeks.
Post holes are dug, posts are set, and panels and gates are attached. Before we leave, we walk the entire fence line with you. Every gate should latch on its own, and the bottom edge should have no gaps large enough for your dog to work through.
We handle the permit check, the caliche soil, and the gate hardware - call us and we will walk your yard before quoting anything.
We do not quote a height or material before we know your dog's size, breed, and behavior. A fence for a small terrier and a fence for a large working dog are different projects, and we treat them that way.
Living near Joshua Tree National Park means coyote pressure is real and year-round. We design bottom-edge treatment and height recommendations with local wildlife pressure in mind - not just what is standard in non-desert climates.
Digging post holes in Twentynine Palms requires the right equipment and experience. We set posts to a depth that accounts for both desert wind loads and shifting caliche soil, so your fence stays plumb through multiple summer heat cycles.
We check current permit requirements with the City of Twentynine Palms before any work starts and handle the application ourselves. You will never receive a notice on your door about an unpermitted fence. Verify contractor licensing at the California Contractors State License Board.
Every pet fence we install is designed around the specific dog that lives there and the specific ground it is going into. That combination of local knowledge and dog-specific planning is what separates a fence that actually works from one that looks fine until your dog finds the weak point.
Add a self-closing, self-latching automatic gate to your dog fence so an unlatched entry is never the reason your dog gets out.
Learn MoreCombine a code-compliant pool barrier with your dog enclosure so both safety requirements are handled in one project.
Learn MoreCall or submit a request today and we will walk your yard, check the ground conditions, and give you a written quote before you commit to anything.