Here are some photos from our fence and shelter build. We do use the non-climb, woven wire from TSC that your link connected to, as well as other fencing. Ours is 60" but that is overkill. 48" is tall enough. We're happy with the material, but we could have pulled it tighter in places. Make sure that you don't place structures they can get on top of next to a fence they might jump over.
Levelling and tamping a pressure treated round post. Cattle panel fence.
Leveling a square post to be used as part of a goat shelter.
Our basic goat shelter. We angle the roof for drainage and water collecting.
A finished shelter. We collect the rain water off the roof into water barrels for watering the goats.
This is a chicken coop. It has welded wire on the run to the right of the photo. We built it before we had goats. The wooden posts are for the roof. We actually used ten foot, 1 1/2" electrical conduit for the uprights. It is good for chickens, but would be torn down by goats. At the back of the photo, you see the non climb, woven wire. The span is attached to the coop and then to the gate. We made the gate by sinking two posts in the ground, connecting them at the top by a board and building a door covered with hardware cloth. You can see the top of the fencing is the red line. The conduit post in the middle and horizontally at the top is for raising the fence height with zip tied deer netting. It is to keep the deer out.
Here you see Big Brown getting friendly with Hazel a couple of years ago. The cattle panel has an added layer of welded wire to keep the little kids from passing through the holes. Now, the goats have beaten down the welded wire and the kids we have are going back and forth to visit the bucks. No-one minds. You can see the bottom of a water barrel on its cinder block base to raise it up for getting water into a bucket or hose.
Here is an 8' x 4' gate from TSC. It doesn't have to be this wide, we put it here before adding more paddock to the back so we may remove it and put a smaller gate here.
Close up of the woven wire.
You can see that we should have tightened this woven wire some more. The fence is sagging where our wether is standing on it. This is where they popped off the staples that attached it to the right to a shelter. We reinforced it with a board.
Here is a shelter with cattle panel fencing and a hay locker which holds eight square bales. We bought it at BJ's and like it a lot. But I realize now that a load of snow on top would have to be pushed off to open it in wintry weather.