Originally posted by 1Bee
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To Cage or not to Cage
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Originally posted by veggiechicken View PostThe mind boggles
Birds seem to prefer red/white currants to black ones. I don't net mine but I have quite a few!
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- I must be a Nutter,VC says so -
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I want to build a fruit cage but it won't be this year so I will continue to protect locally. Birds round here will always peck every unprotected strawberry and strip red currants, closely followed by blackcurrants. Whitecurrants are left totally alone and I have so many raspberries I don't mind sharing.
Some of us live in the past, always talking about back then. Some of us live in the future, always planning what we are going to do. And, then there are those, who neither look behind or ahead, but just enjoy the moment of right now.
Which one are you and is it how you want to be?
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My Mum doesn't have to net anything in her garden bar the cherries. But she lives next to open fields with thick hedgerows so maybe there's plenty to forage.
I have to net on the allotment or lose the berries. I've got 2 set-ups made of dahlia stakes, bamboos and some soft green netting - Garden Naturally will cut it to order and it lasts incredibly well. Tent pegs at the bottom keep them taut. Total cost about £35 each. Pics are from last year, the bushes are A Lot bigger now!
I take them down and store in the shed when the berries have been harvested. Means the stakes will last longer too...
Attached FilesLast edited by sparrow100; 29-04-2016, 09:14 AM.http://mudandgluts.com - growing fruit and veg in suburbia
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My fruit cage (which doubles as a winter brassica cage) is made from leftover tent pole from a broken tent, the igloo style ones, stuck in the ground into blue plumbing tubing.
It's a little tricky to move, at least solo, but it's stood up to all the weather, and cost peanuts.
My jostaberry may be getting a little large this year (though at least the lazy *** is fruiting at last), so I may have to break a bigger tent.
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