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Your cart is empty.4.1 out of 5 stars
- #3,560 in Patio, Lawn & Garden (See Top 100 in Patio, Lawn & Garden)
- #20 in Garden Netting
hm3
Reviewed in the United States on February 7, 2025
This netting is atrocious, and I'd recommend you go to more quality products.To begin, the packaging: the netting is twisted tightly and then tied in multiple ways via knots, bows, twisting it again, more knots and bows, and so on. The time to untangle it is significant.The netting itself is incredibly fragile. The very first encounter from a chicken resulted in a hole. Birds fly right through this stuff. Squirrels, too, aren't phased by running into it, as it just tears. Remarkably, *all debris* gets caught in it, from leaves to twigs, trash, feathers, etc. One must be very careful to remove the debris, or be faced with more tears in the netting.I'm sorry to say I'm going to have to remove this netting and go with a different option, and I recommend you avoid my mistake in this purchase.
Ethan
Reviewed in the United States on February 25, 2025
The net is pretty durable but is NOT a square. It’s cut more of a circle which made it very hard to cover my chicken lot. And everything sticks to it. When I laid it down and as I picked it back up it even picked up rocks. Just a heads up with the aggravation. But overall it will work. Just really wish it was a square/rectangle instead of a circle so it would cover the whole lot.
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2025
This stuff seems good. It feels very thin but others have noted it works well. We have a hawk problem we hope to solve with this. Time will tell. As others have stated, it sticks to everything and grabs onto everything. My gloves were stuck and tangled in it several times. With a few people, we got it installed.This won't work for everyone but for our run (14ft x 20ft with a perimeter of 1x4s on face at the top) we first laid out the entire 25ft x 50ft net on the snowy ground and then folded it over on itself one time to create a 25ft x 25ft net, 2 layers thick. Then we rolled that onto a 2x4x16. With two of us on either side of the run (14ft side), we placed the board with the rolled up net on top of one end of the run and then rolled it out, being mindful to ensure both layers of netting were together and hanging over all sides as we went down the run. We rolled it a few feet, moved the ladders and continued to the end. Without doing this, it would have been an absolute nightmare with wire fencing, staples and boards catching it all the way. Once it was all laid out, rather than stapling it to the side boards all around the run, we cut 1x2s down to around 18" long and screwed those down every few feet all the way around the perimeter with the netting underneath. The netting catches seemingly everything so the thought is if a hawk or owl gets snarled in it, I can easily remove a few of those boards to let the netting down to ground level to remove the bird. For anyone with bird banding experience, this stuff is like a slightly thicker mist netting so my fear is the hawk or owl is not going to just bounce off, they'll probably get caught in it. Again, time will tell.
J. Butler
Reviewed in the United States on September 24, 2024
I love that this product seems to be working well and is not visible, so I don’t have to look at a topping to the coop.That being said, it was the most difficult thing to work with EVER!! There is no putting this up on your own, you will need at least two to three people. It’s like hair thin, and LOOONNGG. Strong tho! You’ll also need to practically vacuum the area you’ll be working with as even a piece of straw will entangle and you’ll have a mess wherever it touches. Shoes, watches and clothing included. Staples and zip ties well to whatever you need it to, just a bitch to work with.
Tempest
Reviewed in the United States on June 30, 2024
Go into this job expecting this crazy thing to get caught on every single stick, leaf, and blade of grass in the area! This net is huge, lightweight, and sturdy- a great value in my opinion. I'm sure there are many uses, but I used it as extra safety for my chickens. My daughter and I were able to put it up by ourselves. It's been over the coop for a few months now and it's protected the birds wonderfully! Expect to be frustrated, DO NOT undo all the ties at once (just one section at a time) and you'll be very happy! The red ties are the ties at the ends of the net. You can barely see the net after it's up, but it it strong! We had a hawk swoop down and the net had no trouble keeping it out!
Cool48
Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2024
The net is wonderful. However, no instructions came with it. It came tied off in sections. I untied it to see how it would unfold. It quickly became a huge tangled mess and got caught on everything in the yard and around the chickens fence. It was pretty frustrating! In hindsight, I’m sure it would have been super easy to install had we known, not to untie the sections first. Now that’s it in place, I love it. It looks good and keeps my chickens in their fence.
Monica
Reviewed in the United States on October 11, 2024
This does the job! Like other reviewers say, it sticks to everything! So, putting it in place can be a nightmare or hilarious depending on your mood. I used the netting to cover my 10’ x 25’ fenced-in chicken yard after I found my beautiful Gold Laced Wyandotte Chicken dead (inside the fenced chicken yard) from a hawk attack. Our goal was to pull it tight and zip tie it to the fence top. At one point I needed to get inside the fenced area to arrange the netting to get it in place. It stuck to my hair, glasses, sticks on the ground and anything else that existed. At one point I was actually laughing hysterically because what else can you do. My son and I finally got it arranged and in place. I think this will work very well. It is very strong and practical invisible from outside the fenced area. So, it’s nice that it’s not an eye sore. I’m happy that I found such an affordable solution to protect the rest of my girls. I read some reviews that said it gets tangled. If you take your time opening it up, this shouldn’t happen. I paid close attention to how it was wrapped up (which was well done). I slowly unfolded it and laid it out, in a long line, in front of my chicken yard. Once I came up with a plan on the best way to get it up and over my fence, we cut the ribbons that held it together. I think opening and unfolding slowly with attention to how it’s wrapped is key. Then, laying it out length wise, before cutting any of the ribbons is very important so as not to get it in a tangled mess. It just takes observation and a plan.
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