Before planning cricket nets in Raghunathapuram, stand near the throwdown end and watch ten balls. The problem is not the whole space; it is the one side where ball speed, child movement, and property risk meet.
The Raghunathapuram scene is simple: an elder sits near the shade, children ask for another few balls, one shot skips toward a scooter handle, and the adult watching the lane says to stop before someone chases it.
One more detail separates a real lane from a weak one: after a mistimed shot, players should not be guessing whether to run, duck, shout, or protect the object sitting outside the net.
Quiet family practice becomes difficult when the same shot side keeps pulling children toward a lane, parked scooter, neighbour wall, or home window. In Raghunathapuram, the cricket-net layout has to solve the place where the ball, the person chasing it, and the nearby object all meet.
In workable terms, Raghunathapuram means quiet family yards, village-side home compounds, small practice strips, and residential play corners where children practice close to neighbours and parked items. The layout has to respect the practice routine, not just the boundary that looks easiest to cover.
EverSafe keeps Raghunathapuram cricket-net planning grounded. The layout should not overtake the yard; it should quietly close the side that leaks balls, protect the objects nearby, and let the family keep using the space normally.