Remove blueberry bush netting immediately after the final harvest, then clean it with low-pressure water, dry it completely, fold it instead of rolling, and store it off the ground in a dry, shaded container to maximize its 5–8 season service life.
Leaving it up until next year is tempting, but that’s the move that costs you a replacement net after a single season. Here’s the exact sequence that protects your netting investment and keeps your blueberry patch ready for next year’s crop.
Why Removing Netting Right After Harvest Matters
Leaving netting on after the berries are gone damages the material and blocks other wildlife from cleaning up fallen fruit. Bird netting that stays up through fall and winter degrades from sun exposure and moisture at least twice as fast as stored netting. Getting it off within a week of the final harvest stops all of those problems cold.
What You Need Before You Start
The job requires basic gear, all of which you probably already own if you installed the netting in the first place. Gather these before you head outside:
- Gloves — netting fibers can snag bare skin
- Low-pressure garden nozzle — a gentle spray setting, not a pressure washer
- Clean, flat surface — driveway or patio for drying and folding
- Storage container or bag — rodent-proof and moisture-proof
- A helper — folding a large net goes twice as fast with two people
Step-by-Step: Removing Blueberry Netting the Right Way
Step 1: Take It Down
Remove all ground pegs and clips first. For drape systems over high-bush blueberries, gently lift the net from one corner and have a helper take the opposite corner. Walk the net back toward the support posts, shaking out loose leaves and twigs as you go. For cage systems, unzip or unclip the panels and lift the netting clear of the frame. Work slowly — snagged netting tears easily on branch stubs and old canes.
Step 2: Rinse With Low-Pressure Water
Lay the net on a clean surface and spray it with a gentle garden hose stream. High pressure forces algae and pesticide residue deeper into the fibers. Focus on areas that touched soil or had heavy leaf buildup. Turn the net over and repeat.
Step 3: Air-Dry Completely
This is the step most people skip, and it’s the one that determines whether the net smells musty next spring. Spread the net flat on a driveway or hang it over a clean clothesline in the shade. Let it dry until every section is bone-dry to the touch — no damp spots at all. Direct sun dries faster but also damages UV stabilizers, so shaded air-drying is the better choice. Drying can take several hours on a humid day, but rolling up even slightly damp netting guarantees mildew.
Step 4: Fold, Never Roll
Rolling the net traps moisture and crushes the material into a tight bundle that degrades unevenly. Instead, fold the net lengthwise in thirds, then fold it again from the ends toward the middle. For large nets, two people working opposite ends produces a clean, manageable rectangle.
Step 5: Store Off the Ground
Place the folded net in a rodent-proof container or heavy-duty bag in a dry, shaded area like a garage, shed, or basement. Never store netting in direct sunlight or near a heat source. A clean plastic storage bin with a tight lid works perfectly — it blocks pests and keeps the humidity low.
Blueberry Netting Specs and Service Life
Knowing what you’re working with helps you protect it better.
| Factor | Specification | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Material | UV-stabilized HDPE | Resists sun damage for 5–8 seasons |
| Mesh size | 16mm (0.63 in) standard | Excludes birds, allows pollinators through |
| Mesh size alternatives | 6mm (1/4 in) for individual bushes | Prevents bird beaks from reaching fruit |
| Service life | 5–8 seasons | Proper storage makes this possible |
| Support height | 7 feet (2.13 m) minimum | Keeps net off plants, allows flat storage |
| Post spacing | 2 feet (0.61 m) apart | Supports perimeter tension |
| Ground peg interval | 1 meter (3.3 ft) | Seals bottom edge against bird entry |
| Drape overhang | 30 cm (11.8 in) | Prevents gaps at ground level |
If you’re in the market for new netting that fits these specs, our tested roundup covers the best bird netting for blueberry bushes based on mesh quality, durability, and real season-long performance in home gardens.
Installation Timing: When to Set Up and Take Down
The calendar window is tighter than most growers think. Netting goes up four to six weeks before the expected harvest, which usually lands in late June or early July for many regions. Remove the netting as soon as the final harvest is done.
Common Mistakes That Shorten Net Life
Even experienced growers make these errors. Each one costs at least one season of service life.
- Rolling instead of folding — traps moisture and causes uneven degradation
- Storing on wet ground — accelerates breakdown two to three times faster
- Ignoring gaps at base — birds enter within hours, and loose nets tear
- Leaving netting up after harvest — sun and wind damage the material
- Rinsing with high-pressure water — drives debris deeper into fibers
- Storing damp — mildew forms within days in a sealed container
Support Structure Requirements for Easy Storage
The support system you build matters for removal and storage as much as it does for bird exclusion. Posts or cages should reach at least seven feet tall so the net sits above the bushes and can be packed flat for storage. A proper support structure makes the net easy to lift off in one piece and keeps it clean during the growing season.
Storm and Debris Checks During the Growing Season
Inspect the netting after every storm and repair any tears within 24 hours. Leaves and branches that accumulate on top of the net add weight that stretches the fibers and pulls the whole structure down. Regular clearing keeps the tension even and prevents stress tears that won’t show up until you try to fold the net at the end of the season.
The Complete Storage Routine
Follow this sequence once per season to hit that 5–8 season mark consistently:
- Remove all pegs, clips, and tension lines
- Walk the net off the bushes from opposite corners
- Rinse with low-pressure water on a clean surface
- Air-dry flat in shade until every section is bone-dry
- Fold lengthwise in thirds, then fold ends toward middle
- Place in a rodent-proof, moisture-proof container
- Store in a dry, shaded location off the ground
That’s how you make bird netting a five-year purchase instead of an annual expense.
FAQs
Can I leave blueberry netting up all winter?
Leaving netting up through winter accelerates UV degradation and traps debris that breeds mildew. Winter winds can also tear loose netting, and heavy snow loads stretch the fibers permanently. Removing it after harvest and storing it dry gives the material years of extra life.
What happens if I store netting while it’s still damp?
Damp netting develops mildew and mold within days in a sealed container. The mold stains the fibers and weakens UV stabilizers, making the net brittle by the time you pull it out next season. Always air-dry until every section is completely dry before folding.
Is it okay to use a pressure washer to clean blueberry netting?
Pressure washers force algae and residue deeper into the net fibers instead of rinsing them out. The embedded debris holds moisture and accelerates UV breakdown. A standard garden hose nozzle on a low-pressure setting is the safest cleaning option.
Does mesh size affect how I store the net?
No, the storage process is the same for all standard mesh sizes. Sixteen millimeter and quarter-inch netting both clean, dry, and fold the same way. The only difference is that finer mesh tends to hold more leaf debris during the season, so rinsing thoroughly matters more.
Why should I fold instead of roll blueberry netting?
Rolling traps moisture between the layers and puts uneven pressure on the fibers, causing permanent creases that weaken the material. Folding in flat sections allows air circulation during storage and keeps the net’s structural integrity intact through multiple seasons.
References & Sources
- EyouAgro. “How To Cover Blueberry With Netting.” Covers installation and removal procedures for home growers.
- EyouAgro. “Blueberry Netting You Need To Know.” Details material specs, service life expectations, and degradation factors.
- Sustainable Market Farming. “Blueberry Netting Tag Archive.” Provides support structure height and spacing guides.
- Common Sense Home. “Blueberry Netting Tips.” Offers practical storage and folding advice for home gardeners.
- Bird B Gone. “Blueberry Netting.” Explains cage installation methods and mesh size effectiveness.
