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Probably depends on the size of the birds, and how determined they are. We have some pretty tiny birds here that probably could fit their heads through a 1" opening, if you were to drape 1" netting right over the plant.I wonder if the 1" would keep songbirds out of the berry bushes.
Yeah it's one of the toughest things to work with. Even in applications where I want a light bird netting, I get the heavy duty version which is made of thicker plastic so it doesn't tangle easily and doesn't tear accidentally just from working with it.Yes, frame supported would be the plan. I tried the lightweight bird netting but it rips easily and was kind of a PITA.
This is what I use as well.https://pinnonhatch.com/poultry-supplies/p/heavy-knotted-poultry-netting-2mesh
This is the one. I have had it up for two years now and it is still like new. Doesn't trap song birds or debris. 7-to 10 years is what they say and i believe them.
What bred of chickens and how many roosters do you have. I can't have roosters and quite docile pet chickens we have don't make good free range. You are country farm raising and we are backyard raising.Alot of times it's hard for me to relate to other members on here. I live in a very remote part of Tennessee. I have black bear, coyote, coon, possum, hawk, owl, stray dogs. I haven't had the problems that even subdivision people have. My coop is open 24/7 and I free range the chickens in the woods? They don't have a run. Everyone's first time back to my place thinks I bought the film location of Deliverance. It really is a great place to find rattlesnakes, chiggers, and moonshine.
So it's hard for me living where I do, to imagine the problems yall got with predators. I have an Anatolian shepherd running loose, scare crow near the coop, and 12 Gauge if needed.
I would start with eagle decoys, scarecrows, or even invite a professional falconer to catch the hawk population.. your local wildlife officer would know how to get in touch with them.
In the long run, chickens are cheap