{
  "id": "bird-netting-mesh-5x10",
  "sku": "bird-netting-mesh-5x10",
  "title": "Bird Netting Mesh 5 m x 10 m",
  "slug": "bird-netting-mesh-5x10",
  "price": 121,
  "currency": "AUD",
  "availability": "in_stock",
  "category": "bird-control",
  "category_label": "Bird Control",
  "tags": [
    "bird-netting",
    "garden",
    "fruit-trees",
    "veggie-patch",
    "mesh",
    "reusable",
    "diy"
  ],
  "colors": [],
  "materials": [
    "Heavy-duty knitted UV-stabilised nylon, 30 g per square metre"
  ],
  "dimensions": {
    "length": 10,
    "width": 5,
    "height": null,
    "unit": "m"
  },
  "weight": null,
  "images": [
    "https://birdspikes.au/product-images/bird-control/bird-netting-mesh-5x10/main-best-bird-netting-mesh.jpg",
    "https://birdspikes.au/product-images/bird-control/bird-netting-mesh-5x10/best-anti-bird-netting-mesh.jpg",
    "https://birdspikes.au/product-images/bird-control/bird-netting-mesh-5x10/best-fruit-tree-bird-netting.jpg",
    "https://birdspikes.au/product-images/bird-control/bird-netting-mesh-5x10/best-garden-bird-net.jpg",
    "https://birdspikes.au/product-images/bird-control/bird-netting-mesh-5x10/best-reusable-garden-netting.jpg",
    "https://birdspikes.au/product-images/bird-control/bird-netting-mesh-5x10/best-tree-garden-net.jpg"
  ],
  "description_short": "A 5 m x 10 m knitted nylon net with a 2 cm x 2 cm mesh, UV stabilised, cut-to-size, and supplied with 40 cable ties and 10 ground stakes.",
  "description": "There is a particular kind of heartbreak that only a gardener knows. The figs were two days from perfect. The tomatoes were just turning. Then the birds arrived, and now you're standing under a stripped tree holding an empty bowl. If that scene sounds familiar, a good garden bird net fixes it for the price of a single lost harvest, and this guide shows you how to choose one and fit it properly.\n\nThis page covers the 5 m x 10 m net, which is the right size for the classic backyard job: a couple of fruit trees, a berry row, a veggie patch or a pond. If you are protecting orchard rows or a long run of beds, the same net comes in a 5 m x 20 m size, and everything in this guide applies to it too.\n\nWhy a Net Beats Every Other Bird Deterrent\n\nScare tape, fake owls, wind chimes and ultrasonic gadgets all share the same weakness. Birds figure them out. A hungry bird will land next to a plastic owl within a week once it learns nothing bad happens. Netting is different because it is not a bluff. The best bird netting for garden use simply makes the fruit unreachable, and there's nothing for the bird to get used to. It lands, finds mesh instead of food, and moves on. Your crop ripens untouched underneath.\n\nNetting is also the humane option. Nothing gets poisoned or trapped. The birds still get to be birds, just not in your fig tree. One of our customers put it well after netting his fig: the net worked so well he felt sorry for the birds and left part of the tree uncovered for them. That's the kind of problem you want to have.\n\nFirst, a Word on Wildlife-Safe Netting\n\nBefore we talk sizes and frames, the important part. The difference between netting that protects wildlife and netting that endangers it comes down to how it is fitted, and it is worth getting right from day one.\n\nLoose, baggy netting flung over a tree is the danger. Birds, bats and other animals can push into slack folds and become entangled. A net fitted taut over a frame, with the edges secured and no loose material, behaves like a wall instead of a trap. Animals bounce off a tight surface. They get caught in a loose one. The rule to remember is simple: if you can poke a finger deep into a slack fold, so can a wing.\n\nMesh size matters as well. Many regions now require small mesh sizes for household fruit tree netting, and the rules vary from place to place. This net has a 2 cm x 2 cm mesh, so before you cover backyard fruit trees, check your local wildlife-safe netting rules and make sure what you are planning complies where you live. Wherever you are, the same practice applies: fit the net drum-tight, close the edges, and check it often. Tension and good edges are what keep wildlife safe.\n\nWhat the 2 cm Knitted Mesh Does Well\n\nThis net is knitted from heavy-duty nylon at 30 g per square metre, and knitted construction is worth a moment of attention. Cheap extruded plastic nets tear like perforated paper once one strand goes. A knitted net spreads the load across the weave, resists rubbing and tearing, and keeps its shape season after season. It is also why you can cut this net with scissors and the edge will not fray or unravel.\n\nThe 2 cm x 2 cm mesh keeps birds away from fruit while staying almost invisible from a few metres back. Sun, air and rain pass straight through, so the microclimate around your plants does not change. Pollinating insects come and go through the mesh as well, which is one more reason netting beats wrapping a tree in shade cloth or old curtains.\n\nThe nylon is UV stabilised, which is what separates reusable garden netting from the throwaway stuff. Sunlight is what kills netting, and a UV-treated net that gets stored in the dark between seasons keeps coming back out of the shed year after year.\n\nMeasuring Up: Will 5 m x 10 m Cover It?\n\nNetting maths trips people up because a net covers an up-and-over distance, not a floor plan. To net a tree, you need the height doubled plus the width of the canopy, in both directions. A dwarf fruit tree 2 m tall and 2 m wide needs roughly 6 m of net each way to reach the ground on all sides, so this 5 m x 10 m net covers one comfortably with material to spare, or two smaller trees with the net cut in half.\n\nFor beds, the sums are friendlier. A veggie patch or berry row protected by low hoops uses a strip a little wider than the bed itself. One 5 m x 10 m net cut lengthwise can cover two long 2 m wide beds, or a bed and a pond, or a bed and the top of a small chicken run. Because the mesh cuts cleanly and will not fray, one net often ends up doing three or four jobs around the same garden.\n\nIf your list includes a full orchard row, a big run or anything longer than 10 m in one piece, skip the joins and go straight to the 5 m x 20 m size. A single net with no seams is faster to fit and leaves no gaps for birds to find.\n\nBuild a Frame, Then Net It\n\nWherever possible, put structure under the net rather than draping mesh straight onto branches. Draped netting snags fruit and new growth, is harder to harvest through, and creates the loose folds that put wildlife at risk. The frame doesn't need to be clever. Star pickets with poly pipe arched between them work well, and so does a ridge batten between two timber stakes. For beds, wire hoops pushed into the soil do the job for the cost of a coffee.\n\nFitting goes like this. First find the four corners, which are marked with bright strings so you are not hunting through folds of mesh. Square the net up over the frame, then work around the edge pulling it taut and fixing it to the frame with the 40 included cable ties. Tension is the goal: the surface should feel like a trampoline, not a curtain.\n\nThen close the edges. Pin the net to the ground with the 10 included stakes, or gather it against the trunk below the canopy and tie it off. This last step is the one that decides whether the netting works. Birds and possums don't chew through mesh, they walk through the gap you left at the bottom. Walk the boundary once before you call the job finished.\n\nLiving With the Net\n\nA netted garden runs itself, mostly. Give the net a glance every day or two and after every storm. You're checking that the surface is still tight and that nothing has become caught. In the rare case that a bird or animal does become entangled, work slowly, cover it with a towel, and free the mesh strand by strand, cutting the net if you need to. An injured animal, or any bat or flying fox, should only be handled by your local wildlife rescue, so make the call and keep people and pets clear until they arrive.\n\nFor harvesting, set up one edge as a door. Unhook it, pick what is ripe, close it behind you. With a frame holding the mesh off the branches, picking through a netted tree takes no longer than an unnetted one, minus the part where the birds already ate everything.\n\nThe same net earns its keep beyond fruit. Stretch it over the chicken run to keep wild birds out of the feed. Lay it across the pond in autumn to stop herons raiding fish and leaves fouling the water. Hoop it over seedlings and new lawn until they are established. Plenty of customers also find it doubles as possum netting for gardens under siege at night, and the fix is the same as for birds: tight mesh, closed edges, no gaps.\n\nCare, Storage and Next Season\n\nWhen the harvest is in, take the net down rather than leaving it up all year. Shake out the leaves, rinse it if it is grubby, dry it fully and store it somewhere dark. Out of the sun, UV-stabilised nylon holds its strength, and the net you fold away in autumn is the net you unfold next spring. The best fruit tree netting is the one that goes into the shed dry and comes out sound. Fold it corners-first with the bright strings on the outside and future-you will thank you at setup time.\n\nThe Bottom Line\n\nBirds take the easiest meal on offer, and an unprotected fruit tree is a free buffet with a signpost. A taut, well-fitted net takes the buffet off the menu without hurting anything that visits. Measure the up-and-over distance, stand a simple frame, fit the net tight, close the edges, and check it as you wander past with your morning coffee. Do that, and the only thing between you and your best harvest yet is patience.",
  "llm_summary": "Bird Netting Mesh 5 m x 10 m: reusable garden bird netting knitted from heavy-duty UV-stabilised nylon (30 g per square metre) with a 2 cm x 2 cm mesh. Protects fruit trees, veggie beds, berries, seedlings, ponds and chicken runs from birds without harming them. Cuts to size without fraying, corners marked with bright strings, and the pack includes 40 cable ties and 10 ground stakes. Fit it taut over a frame with edges secured for wildlife-safe use. Also sold in a larger 5 m x 20 m size.",
  "returnable": true,
  "return_policy": "Faulty goods covered by the Australian Consumer Law; change-of-mind returns in resaleable condition",
  "shipping_profile": "standard",
  "warranty": null,
  "brand": "Bird Spikes Australia",
  "gtin": null,
  "mpn": null,
  "condition": "new",
  "url": "https://birdspikes.au/bird-netting-mesh-5x10/",
  "canonical_url": "https://birdspikes.au/bird-netting-mesh-5x10/",
  "json_url": "https://birdspikes.au/api/products/bird-netting-mesh-5x10.json",
  "updated_at": "2026-07-14",
  "compare_at_price": 143
}
