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Bird Netting 6.5m x 300m roll

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Professional Vineyard Grade Bird Netting – 6.5m × 300m Roll

Delivery is calculated separately based on freight and local handling.

The 6.5m × 300m Bird Netting Roll is a premium, professional-grade exclusion solution tailored for the demanding requirements of Australian viticulture and horticulture. Featuring a 15mm diamond weave, this netting provides a high-tensile barrier that protects fruit from bird damage while ensuring unhindered airflow and sunlight penetration for uniform ripening.

Long-Term Performance in Harsh Conditions

Engineered to withstand prolonged exposure to intense sunlight, this netting is 10-year UV stabilised, significantly extending its field life compared to standard alternatives. At a 30gsm weight, the net offers professional-level durability without excessive mass, making it manageable for both manual application and mechanical deployment across large-scale vineyards and orchards.

Optimized Dimensions: The 6.5m width provides excellent coverage for medium-to-large canopies, while the 300m length is ideal for long commercial rows, reducing the need for joins and overlaps.

Technical Specifications

Specification Details
Net Grade Professional Vineyard Grade
Roll Dimensions 6.5m × 300m
Mesh Type 15mm Diamond Weave
Fabric Weight 30 gsm
UV Protection 10-Year UV Stabilised
Colour White
Main Features
  • Diamond Weave Tech: Provides multi-directional stretch for a superior, snug fit over various canopy shapes.
  • Professional Weight: 30gsm density ensures a high strength-to-weight ratio for industrial use.
  • Broad Coverage: 6.5m width is ideal for covering standard vineyard rows and medium fruit trees.
  • Sustainable Protection: A reusable, non-toxic physical barrier that eliminates the need for chemical bird deterrents.
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The Essential Equipment Guide to Harvesting Olives

Harvesting is one of the most critical and labour-intensive stages in olive production, traditionally consuming up to 80% of orchard costs. Today, growers are turning to modern solutions that combine efficiency with fruit quality. From powerful mechanical trunk shakers and self-propelled buggies, to versatile electric and pneumatic harvesters, and essential tools like nets, rakes, and trailers.
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Guardian Gas Gun vs Vinetech Electronic Bird Scare Gun

A professional comparison of the Guardian Gas Gun and Vinetech Electronic Bird Scare Gun, outlining operation, sound coverage, control features, compliance, and suitability for agricultural bird control.
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Toro Waterbird Sprinklers Discontinued: What It Means for Olive Growers

Toro has discontinued its Waterbird irrigation sprinklers, prompting olive growers to reassess under-tree irrigation systems and consider modern alternatives including micro-sprinklers and drip irrigation. What are the alternatives?
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Opportunities for Australian EVOO Exports to India

India’s olive oil market is small but rapidly growing, with rising health awareness, premiumisation and tariff reductions under the Australia-India ECTA creating new opportunities for Australian extra virgin olive oil exporters.
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New mandatory grocery supply rules start applying from 1 April 2026, bringing stronger contract, pricing and dispute protections for olive growers supplying major supermarkets.
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Ensuring Olive Grove Security: Minimum Resource Thresholds for Secure Production Operation

A practical guide to minimum water, fuel, fertiliser and crop protection thresholds needed to maintain olive grove productivity and avoid yield losses.
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U.S. Olive Oil Market Faces Policy Crossroads as Standards, Tariffs and Trust Take Centre

U.S. Olive Oil Market Faces Policy Crossroads as Standards, Tariffs and Trust Take Centre Stage
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Those Pesky Birds in the Olive Grove!

Here is an experience from one of our Growers in Queensland who has had success with Bird Control in Olives:

"After trying almost every bird scaring devices in the last 5-10 years which included Gas Guns, Sound recorded scare devices, running out into the grove every 30 mins with ATV's to scare them away, placing fake snakes (and some not so fake) in strategic parts of the grove... nothing seemed to work! ?Roger says "We were going out of our minds!" ?Then we came across a product called D-Ter. ?Now, re the DETER. Recommended rate is 50g/litre.

Last season just gone, I cut it back to 15g/litre, but it was a quite rainy ripening season, and the combination of low rate and less than ideal weather led to a reduced effectiveness.

In a previous year, I'd used 20g/litre and I was happy with that result. ?The directions state that the product loses it's effectiveness in wet weather but that the effectiveness returns once the foliage dries out. ?That may be so, but I believe that every shower washes some of it away, so in constantly wet weather, it just will not last the 8 to 10 weeks they say it can. This other thing they say is to apply it BEFORE the bird pressure starts! Ha! That's fine for them to say - they're selling the stuff. So next season, I'll try to schedule my one spraying (at 20g/litre) for about 8 weeks before harvest and hope for a dry couple of months, while using other bird deterrent techniques simultaneously.

Hope that helps. It's not a silver bullet, and one has to look at the cost/benefit quite closely and make up your own mind. If you're the stressful type and the birds are taking their toll on your sanity, you have to put a price on that too.

Ironically, my take is that DTER is for small producers like us, with few trees. The big guys, with thousands of trees, can probably tolerate bird intrusion around the edges, and just write off the loss. For us, the edges join up in the middle!!!

Keep up your tireless good work, Amanda - I don't know where you find the energy. All the best RH, QLD"