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Dave 14-07-2005 06:16 PM

Bird Netting
 
Last year the birds pecked the heck out of my berries, so this year I
have netting on my thornless blackberries. How much of a struggle is
this going to be? It was a pain to get it unrolled and into position,
and now I wonder how often I need to check it for entangled birds and
critters? It is 0.8 inch black square mesh.

Thanks


Puckdropper 14-07-2005 10:03 PM

"Dave" wrote in news:1121361391.758428.210080
@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com:

Last year the birds pecked the heck out of my berries, so this year I
have netting on my thornless blackberries. How much of a struggle is
this going to be? It was a pain to get it unrolled and into position,
and now I wonder how often I need to check it for entangled birds and
critters? It is 0.8 inch black square mesh.

Thanks



My mother always covered her strawberries with a net. She'd anchor the
netting with gallon water jugs, which made pulling the netting off and
putting it back on quite easy. She also used a fine mesh (like a window
screen) rather than something as large as you're describing.

I'm not sure how big blackberry plants get, but I hope this gives you a
few ideas to make things easier.

Puckdropper

--
www.uncreativelabs.net

Old computers are getting to be a lost art. Here at Uncreative Labs, we
still enjoy using the old computers. Sometimes we want to see how far a
particular system can go, other times we use a stock system to remind
ourselves of what we once had.

To email me directly, send a message to puckdropper (at) fastmail.fm

Steve 16-07-2005 12:21 AM

Puckdropper wrote:
..................................
My mother always covered her strawberries with a net. She'd anchor the
netting with gallon water jugs, which made pulling the netting off and
putting it back on quite easy. She also used a fine mesh (like a window
screen) rather than something as large as you're describing.



I always just used bricks.

Fine mesh would be nice. Plants parts wouldn't poke through and get
tangled and it would be much easier to free trapped birds. With the
larger mesh I used, they seemed to always manage to get their head and
one wing through the hole. Sometimes I couldn't free them without
snipping at least one strand to enlarge the hole.

Steve

TQ 16-07-2005 12:44 AM

"Steve" wrote in message
...
Puckdropper wrote:
..................................
My mother always covered her strawberries with a net. She'd anchor the
netting with gallon water jugs, which made pulling the netting off and
putting it back on quite easy. She also used a fine mesh (like a window
screen) rather than something as large as you're describing.



I always just used bricks.

Fine mesh would be nice. Plants parts wouldn't poke through and get
tangled and it would be much easier to free trapped birds. With the
larger mesh I used, they seemed to always manage to get their head and
one wing through the hole. Sometimes I couldn't free them without
snipping at least one strand to enlarge the hole.


The past several years I've been covering by strawberry bed with a double
layer of cotton toole. I buy the toole by the bolt in the fall (after the
wedding season when it's half-price) at a fabric store. It keeps the birds
out and limits the damage from squirrels.

The bed has a border made from pine logs cut from my woodlot. The toole is
tacked down along one side with lathe and anchored on the other side with
oak or maple poles.



John Savage 18-07-2005 12:09 AM

"Dave" writes:
Last year the birds pecked the heck out of my berries, so this year I
have netting on my thornless blackberries. How much of a struggle is
this going to be? It was a pain to get it unrolled and into position,
and now I wonder how often I need to check it for entangled birds and
critters? It is 0.8 inch black square mesh.


Surely the neighbourhood cats will do all necessary untangling?
--
John Savage (my news address is not valid for email)



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