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| I have 2 dwarf cherry trees that are going to have a LOT of cherries this year. since the birds got them all last year I bought netting.
right now the cherries are still small and green So .. when is the proper time to net the trees to prevent bird theft? |
Follow-Up Postings:
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- Posted by konrad___far_north 3..just outside of E (My Page) on Sun, May 20, 12 at 12:33
| Just when turning red, or at first sign of robbing, you don't want netting too early, netting is not too friendly towards branches/leafs. |
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- Posted by franktank232 z5 WI (My Page) on Sun, May 20, 12 at 12:50
| I netted mine today. The birds have been attacking them for a few days. I would have ripe cherries if I would have netted a week ago. |
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| I net mine tomorrow. The cherries are still primarily green with a hint of red and yellow. I don't wait for robbing. Mrs. g |
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| Hey Frank or Mrs. G, would you mind posting pictures of how your net them? I am trying to think in my mind of how you would. Where do you secure the ends of the net too? And, do you have some sort of structure to keep it further out from the tree, or does the net lay right on the tree? Would birds still be able to pluck at it, or if they are unable to land do they leave it alone? :) Thanks. |
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| Dear raiquee! I used to put four six foot bamboo poles in the ground around the tree. Then toss my netting over both sides and secure with twist ties. The tree is now too large to do that! I now simply throw netting over the tree itself (in both directions), gather the netting at the trunk and secure with garden twine. Hopes this helps. Same for my apricots and plums. |
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| Where do you get your netting? |
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| I got mine mail order from Stark Brothers Nursery. |
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| I hate those nets. They're too small for anything but the tiniest trees, and very snaggy when they catch on the twigs. Best thing I can say for them is they can sometimes snag a bird. |
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| We have an 'Agway'/ Farm store. They sell wider sizes of bird netting in pre-sealed packages. It is stronger than regular bird netting too! Deters squirrels. |
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- Posted by spartan-apple SE WI (My Page) on Mon, May 21, 12 at 15:43
| Frank: What cherry are you growing that is coloring already? I have grown North Star for many years. Not colored yet but soon. As far as netting, at the first sign of pink I spray one As far as netting, I use a post pounder and put in 4-8' stakes suitable for staking up a tomato plant in each corner around the tree. Since these are too short, I attach another 4' stake that is perhaps 1/2" diameter to the top of the post with a large automotive hose clamp. The netting is a large plastic netting thaI I stretch out behind the tree. We use two garden rakes to lift the netting and carefully get it over the tree (short stepladder on each side of the tree is helpful). This is not easy unless you have the whole family out then everyone pitches in. Once the net is over the tree, I staple the netting on the top sides of the 4 stakes. The bottom 1/2 is not stapled This system allows me to lift up the netting on the sides and put my 6' stepladder inside to pick the fruit. Usually Fortunately my North Star is pruned to 8' height as too tall makes it hard to net. Last year I got 28 quarts of cherries (after pitting)! This year the crop is lighter but still a crop. Since my Yes it is work, but if I don't net at the first sign of pink on the fruit, the birds will clean me out in just a few days. |
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| I use netting from a company called 'Ross'. The netting I use is 7' wide by 21' long. Works very well. I keep my Montmorency cherry at just about 8 -10 feet tall. Mrs. G |
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| Went out to see if I had any fruit left and saw that the White Gold cherries had gone past blush to almost red - which naturally had begun to attract the birds, which it had never done before. It's not SUPPOSED to turn red! But the birds are awful this year, worse than they've ever been. I went to look for the net I thought was a tree net, but it was a row net - useless. So I picked the reddest ones, to get something out of the crop, even though they aren't as ripe as I'd like. Then deployed the plastic owls, which have never worked. |
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- Posted by franktank232 z5 WI (My Page) on Fri, May 25, 12 at 21:32
| Spartan- I didn't catch your question... Lapins and Stella are mostly done here. Lapins was excellent this year...Stella is so so... The robins are attacking them. This dry wx (today is finally wet) is pushing the birds to them hard. Kristin is getting there. Black Gold has 1 cherry...i think the frost or freeze did it in or maybe poor pollination. Lots of cherries...very good. Kids love them. |
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| At the first hint of pink. I did mine(Northstar) a week ago. As said, the birds will destroy your crop in a couple days as soon as the cherries get pink. As for netting, I constructed a cube of 3/4" PVC pipe with elbows and couplers. It's about 9' tall by 10'wide. I keep the tree pruned to 8' so I can manage netting and picking, etc. To attach the net, I found some plastic clips on amazon.com that snap onto the PVC perfectly. The look like a 4" section of pipe cut lengthwise in half. I just use the cheap plastic netting from Lowes. The structure yields 100% protection and since it's slightly larger than the tree, I get no damage to shoots and leaves. And I can open up a corner and get in comfortably to pick. It might be a bit elaborate for some but it goes up fairly easy and gives great results. |
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- Posted by konrad___far_north 3..just outside of E (My Page) on Sun, May 27, 12 at 13:26
| You need the commercial "heavy" netting, otherwise you loose too many birds what get tangled up in these light made nettings. If you don't want to spray against fruit flies, I found this illustration, it's in German, but you get the idea. |
Here is a link that might be useful: Netting against cherry fruit flies
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