24 July 2014

Allotanetting

In the past I've baulked at the idea of netting my crops in the hope that "nature" would protect them.This year however the birds have discovered our allotment site and the sparrows in particular are ravaging the more tender seedlings such as peas,beans and chard as well as feasting on the establishing soft fruit.
So I've been trying out some netting solutions mainly using recycled materials.
The soft netting bought some years ago,which did good service combined with plastic hoops (now defunct due to sunlight), seems to work well when draped over the rows of strawberries and also over the black and red currants underplanted with rhubarb chard and lettuce.
I've also been developing a method of using the spare fence wire netting to make some crop covers.
My first try was to double over the netting to produce a fairly rigid framework and then to secure it to the ground with plastic pegs which were part of the original soft netting/plastic hoops kit .The ends are filled in some old bits of rigid netting.
On my later attempts I've threaded spare canes along the base of the hoops and wired two together,which makes a more rigid frame and they are easier to remove for harvesting or weeding.
 
 
 
The only current expenditure has been on a new close weave net for a brassica cage.I'd tried cheap plastic nets which ripped when being secured,and also my soft netting which had too large a mesh to keep the cabbage whites out!
The net is 10 x 8 metres ie HUGE.Initially I draped it over blue piping hoops which I've had for a couple of years but that left vast amounts of material around the perimeter,so it's now supported on poles which I bought some time ago and hadn't found a use for.
It's a bit OTT.Next year I think I'll cut it into two peices to cover separate beds using the hoops and smaller poles.

While there have been lots of slugs this year they don't seem to have caused as much damage as the birds.
My Orla potatoes seem to have suffered the most from slug damage with about a third of the crop affected,while the first early Premiere and 2nd early Blue Kestrel have been virtually pest free.
Blue Kestrel

I've just returned from a walking trip in the Austrian Tyrol and will be writing a post,with photo album, soon.

2 comments:

Sue Garrett said...

Without nettng and enviromesh we would have very few crops.

Rooko said...

I agree with you about using netting, it's a real pain installing and uninstalling it. I've just finished building a fruit cage on one of my plots and in the process of moving strawberry plants into it. One method I found to make smaller "nets" is to use the rolls of rigid netting arched to length then tie the ends across the base with twine. When you have finished using the cloches the string is cut and the netting lies flat for storage.

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