🌼 Keep your garden thriving with style!
This 4Ft x 10Ft Mosquito Bug Insect Bird Fine Mesh Net Barrier is designed to protect your plants, fruits, and flowers from unwanted pests while allowing essential air, water, and light to nourish them. Made from durable, UV-resistant PE material, this versatile netting is perfect for various gardening applications, ensuring your green space remains healthy and vibrant all year round.
Item Shape | Fruits,Animal,Flower |
Color | White |
Material Type | Mesh |
A**C
Great for keeping bugs out
I was going berserk over bugs coming in through my air conditioners….bought this after a quick Reddit scroll for advice and it’s been doing the job fine since!Mesh is really pretty and almost looks intentional. Fabric is durable and pleasantly thin, I had to cut it with kitchen scissors. So far no bugs especially light drawn ones or mosquitos. Coverage is HUGE - I definitely didn’t need the 8-10ft lol.
A**R
Good for what I need it for
I use this for my rabbit that's on the porch for his cage to keep the bugs out. Works pretty good, no complaints!
T**R
Works well
We ordered the 10' x 50' netting fabric for our garden hoop house, and we wanted to cut the 50-foot long piece into three sections, 20 feet, 20 feet and 10 feet. Cutting it was a chore because the fabric is so slick, but we made it work.Our only negative was that the piece was not quite 10 feet wide: it was 9 feet, 11 inches. We had to alter our design a bit but the fabric netting did cover the pvc hoops over our garden.Two notes: the fabric does NOT stretch, and the unfinished edges caught on the fabric itself, leaving some noticeable spots but no holes.The fine mesh gives our full-sun garden some much-needed slight shade, so that is helpful too.Overall, the netting fabric works great to keep out insects, so we are happy with it.
K**Y
As described
Perfect for whatever you need. You can cut it or use as is.
L**H
Non-Traditional Use
>.. I had a big time vacuum sealer that used smooth bags, not the ridged ones for less expensive vacuum sealers. When I stopped hunting, the need for that big powerful vacuum sealer went away as well. It took up too much counter space, so I went back to a smaller, effective vacuum sealer. But that machine wanted the ridged bags and I had maybe 1000, in various sizes, of the smooth bags.>.. In order to make the smooth bags suck air out, there needed to be something that allowed the air to escape, but would melt with the plastic of the bags. There were various solutions on the self-made video tube site, but none seemed easy to me or would work with my sealer. So, I searched for a thin 'ruffled' plastic that would allow air out and usually not interfere in the machine when it sealed the bags.>.. For me, this works. I cut a playing card sized piece of this netting, place it in the bag down towards the product, and up to the neck. then I slide the bag into the machine, triggering the vacuum process and the automatic seal. Before I take the bag out, I move it slightly and run the sealer a second time.>.. The air in the bag is sucked out, the seal closes the bag and the second seal usually is just a safety seal [to make sure] and not absolutely necessary, but . . .>.. I do not think the netting is melted, rather it looks intact as I examine the seal. What I think happens is that the air is drawn out over the netting, it is pressed when the bag is sealed and the bag 'melts' into the netting. I do make a second seal to assure myself that it is sealed. [Once i didn't and two days later it was full of air = not sealed.] So, now I do it twice, every time!
N**R
Low quality and delicate, but functional
Bought this stuff to put up around my sun canopy as mosquito netting. The product is not really intended for this I don't think, but in the end I made it work. A few things you might want to know about it:Pros:It does actually function as mosquito nettingInexpensiveCons:Very delicate. I had to be very careful not to snag it on anything as I moved it around, because it was really easy to damage the weave.Hard to work with. I was working with a 8'x50' sheet of the stuff, and I have to say, it was not an easy task. It's lightweight, so the wind blew it around a lot, and it snags on EVERYTHING. Plus it's so easy to damage, I had to wear kid gloves the entire time to keep from putting holes in it. If you're going to get a lot of it, I suggest having a partner around to help you, especially if you care about what the finished product looks like.Edges fray like crazy. The edges are not finished in any way. The weave is very basic and it will unravel easily at the edges.Doesn't look great. The appearance of this stuff is pretty cheap. I managed to damage it while putting it up so that didn't help, but even if I hadn't it would still look super flimsy. I don't expect it to last.Conclusion:In the end, my purposes were served by this material, but it was probably not worth the $20 I saved by getting it instead of something a bit nicer. If I were going to do it all again, I'd buy some higher quality material that has finished edges, a stronger weave, and a bit more weight to it. I think it would work great for plant netting (as it's being advertised), but in any situation where the finished product needs to look halfway decent for a long time, I would look elsewhere.
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منذ شهرين
منذ 4 أيام