MORE: Build a Potted Trellis With Branches
Ever since colonial-era homesteaders wove wattle garden structures from unbranched shoots of willow or hazel and set their peas to clamber over rows of tiny-twigged birch limbs, countless generations have used sticks to prop up their plants. Today, homeowners who want to combine beauty and utility can do the same. "Metal stakes and hoops may be practical," says Connecticut gardener Thyrza Whittemore, "but aesthetics are important, even in the vegetable garden." So she reaches for branches pruned in early spring—close at hand, easy to fashion to the right size, biodegradable, and free—to bring order to her beds. Read on to learn how she does it.
Step 1: Get prepped
MORE: Best Hand Pruners
Step 2: Lay out the framework
Sort sticks by length; use the longest ones first. Cut lightweight twine into a bunch of 5- to 6-inch lengths and set aside. Push support sticks straight into the ground, 6 inches deep, at each end of the trellis and in the middle. Fasten twine to the supports at either end, just above the ground, as a guide for keeping a straight line. Then cut measuring sticks, one 5 inches for spacing, one 3 feet as a height check.
MORE: See a special homeowner tip for this project at Thisoldhouse.com
Step 3: Set the first diagonals
MORE: Climbing and Rambling Roses
Step 4: Weave in more sticks, tie them where they cross
MORE: Versatile Vines, Perfect Plants for Trellises
Step 5: Trim the ends
MORE: Choosing and Using Pruners and Loppers
Step 6: Plant peas or other vining plants, and watch them climb
MORE: Our Favorite Climbing Plants
Step 7: Beef up twig supports for peonies
MORE: Growing Perfect Tomatoes
To keep the nodding heads of her 36- to 40-inch-tall 'Festia Maxima' peonies upright (inset, below), Thyrza surrounds their bed with 3-foot metal stakes, driving them into the ground about 2 feet apart when the plants are 1 foot tall. Then she uses the stakes to secure twine that she runs in a grid through the bed, just below the flower heads, hiding it in the foliage; she adds another grid when the plants are 2 feet tall. "Take into account the height of your peonies so that the stakes don't stick up above their heads like they're in a corral," she says. Apple-twig X's tied to the outside of the stakes put a pretty face on the grid.
Step 8: Reinforce framework for tomatoes
More: Grow Perfect Tomatoes





















































Visit Our Store »
Go Pro Today »




It looks like spam to me.
Excellent Instructable and thank you!