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Reviewed in the United States on June 1, 2025
Great for the blueberries I just planted!
Audra252
Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2025
Well made good price but Not recommend for a banana tree to protect the bananas.
Margaret E. McCall
Reviewed in the United States on May 10, 2025
Perfect for covering my raspberry and blueberry bushes from the birds. This is my first year trying to grow these fruits so bushes are still smaller than full grown but with the slide closure they work fine for this. They are large enough though to continue to use as the bushes get full grown. As I expand my garden next year and add more of these berries I will be reordering these.
DMAdam47
Reviewed in the United States on April 8, 2025
With these sturdy and large garden mesh you will be ready to keep out just about every critter, bird and insect. I put some of my tomatoes in wire cages and these should help keep them in place too. They have a draw screen at the base which should help some insects. When picking they will be easy to untie and pull up easily. They are extremely made and should be good for several years.
Justin123
Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2025
I got these to use on my small blueberry bush and around my tomato cages. They're the perfect size, and the material seems ideal for keeping squirrels, birds, and some insects away. I’ll update this if it doesn’t work out, but I won’t know for sure until the end of the season. Personally, I think the price is great for a five-pack. It’s just a really simple and effective way to make sure you get to keep some of your harvest for yourself. The sizing also seems spot-on.
Husker4Life1976
Reviewed in the United States on April 21, 2025
I planted some fruit trees and the wildlife have started trying to nibble at it. These nets are the right size for dwarf trees starting to grow. They are not the thickest netting so if the branches are sharp they will cut the netting, but it does the job at keeping the deer out. The strings attach with a pull cord and you can tighten all the way to the base. The photo is from a distance, but you can see they are covering my fruit trees easily.
Azure
Reviewed in the United States on April 2, 2025
These were much heavier duty than I anticipated. A little unraveling happening, but a little snipping with the scissors fixed it right up. Something is eating my newly emerging blueberries leaves and I was able to slap these over the three plants right away! What a game changer for gardeners.
683HNN
Reviewed in the United States on April 13, 2025
We live in a forest, in the southeastern U.S. Our location comes with healthy dose of insects, birds, reptiles and mammals, who present all sorts of challenges to any garden you might try to plant. Take the seemingly benign squirrels. The forest gives them plenty of nuts to eat, bark to munch on, and even a distant woodpile to gnaw away at - but the preferred chewing treat is the stalk of our nurtured, zone sensitive, potted plants.Our potted plants wouldn't make it without these nets. The nets not only keep most leaf eaters out of our flowers; they keep the squirrels from chewing at the branches and destroying large plants that we've nursed along for years. I love how cheerful geranium blossoms look, but not seeing the chewed-up stalks trailed across our patio.The sturdy plastic-coated nets totally defeat the squirrels. I put our irrigation hose up the side and inside the pots, a bamboo stake or two inside to keep the net rigid, then pull the net over the whole affair and cinch the bottom. My flowers have a shot at a lovely spring. So easy - as long as the net technology continues to befuddle the local rodentia.
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