@St. Tom Ah mate, I didn't realise you really wanted to SCROG them! Personally the scrog-net could/should have been introduced already.
The best way in my opinion is to take a strong metal net, something like this :
https://www.hornbach.nl/p/aardmat-v...MIvOeo76GBgQMVmJ5oCR3p4wbWEAQYCCABEgLyAvD_BwE
The 5x5cm squares are essential and although
@WildBill his proposed way could work too, its slightly different than what I would propose. It can definitely work too, don't get me wrong, but after scrogging hundreds/thousands of plants I think the following setup is the easiest to work with and gives great results. The thing I don't like about the stretchy, plastic nets is that they never fill the complete grow area with squares, the holes are too big and furthermore if you really want to scrog with tie-rips the plastic doesn't work that great. What you need for a great scrog is a lot of cross sections (where the edges of the square meet) and the 5x5cm are just perfect, in any grow setup. Using them as your anchor point gives a perfect division of buds onto the net, which will then grow into the perfect screen of green.
In my opinion the plastic nets should be mainly used as support nets, either when you growing freely like you are doing now, or as the top layer in a scrog (so one layer above the metal net). They are super useful to keep those precious, thick buds upright, making sure the get the heaviest they can get, which improves your yield even further.
For anyone that wants to understand what I mean, just have a quick sneak peak here :
https://dutch-passion.blog/growing-cannabis-with-the-scrog-screen-of-green-method/
You see a few examples of SCROG grows, with 4 plants, but also with 2 or even 1 plant per m2. The last picture (and the 2nd before last) shows an example of a SCROG with metal net at the bottom and the plastic net on top for the support.
And cheers to
@DeanOnAuto
Peace out guys