Vertical Gardening Tips

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Bamboo grass is unbelievably strong, yet its hollow chambers give it great rot resistance and lightweight.
Bamboo grass is unbelievably strong, yet its hollow chambers give it great rot resistance and lightweight.
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You can achieve greater harvests with vertical growing. The author's favorite type of plant support, the sturdy woven-wire trellis, is durable enough to last for years.
You can achieve greater harvests with vertical growing. The author's favorite type of plant support, the sturdy woven-wire trellis, is durable enough to last for years.
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Use wire fencing around wooden stakes for strong tomato cages.
Use wire fencing around wooden stakes for strong tomato cages.
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This year Susan and Franklin are also experimenting with lightweight and easy-to-install nylon netting.
This year Susan and Franklin are also experimenting with lightweight and easy-to-install nylon netting.
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There's something special about watching a tipi of greenery rise before your eyes.
There's something special about watching a tipi of greenery rise before your eyes.
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Easy to assemble, the string trellis is the classic support for pole beans.
Easy to assemble, the string trellis is the classic support for pole beans.
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Give a pole tipi the accordion treatment — and you get the versatile tipi trellis.
Give a pole tipi the accordion treatment — and you get the versatile tipi trellis.
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A "pup tent" trellis is an attractive way to raise two crops in one space.

A few years back I was leading an old friend through my garden, all the while bemoaning my lack of growing space, when he suddenly interrupted me and asked, “Why do people build skyscrapers?” What this had to do with my overcrowded garden, I hadn’t a clue. “So they can cram a lot of people into a place without using up much ground room?” I ventured.

“Exactly. Sort of like your garden, wouldn’t you say? You’ve got acres of unused space — in the air.”

My friend was right. The extra room I needed was literally right in front of my eyes. I started “growing up” and soon found that vertical gardening has many benefits. It increases yields: Most climbing vegetable varieties bear heavier and longer than bush types. By providing better aeration, it can reduce disease. In one study, North Carolina State University researchers found that trellised cucumbers (which also had the bottom foot of foliage pruned) produced much healthier plants, and twice as many fruits, as untrellised vines. Vertical growing also creates cooler microclimates for understory crops. And it adds visual appeal to the overall garden.

One more thing: Most bush varieties were bred from climbing ones, and many growers think the original climbing cultivars have better, old-fashioned flavor. As a seed-saver friend of mine once put it, “Why stoop to pick inferior-tasting peas?”

Of course, short varieties do offer some conveniences. Since those bush beans, dwarf tomatoes and other determinate varieties cease growing at a set height, they’re often able to stand on their own. And they bear all at once rather than over an extended period. But to my mind, the benefits of trellising crops are well worth the efforts.

  • Published on Mar 26, 2021
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