Welcome to the summer garden, have you used any vertical gardening elements with your vegetables? What has been your favorite?
@angelamarchbanks26214 жыл бұрын
I grow my tomatoes on a cattle panel. New this year we've grown our cantaloupe (his) and personal-sized watermelon (hers) on a trellis. It's helped to keep a balanced home since neither of us likes the other's melons. lol They are a good size and haven't so far required added supports. I don't know much about beans and the different types so next year we might add pole beans to the mix.
@davebodily68074 жыл бұрын
I use a high tunnel with twine and tomato clips to hold the vines.
@amandaforeman7034 жыл бұрын
I use cattle panels for my luffa gourds !
@anitahamrick12194 жыл бұрын
Melissa.. sure enjoy your videos!! You have a beautiful garden! Since I don’t have help with putting up cattle panels I use concrete mesh and put two together with zip ties for a trellis for my peas and beans... works great and easy for me to handle. I did however take bolt cutter to tracker supply and cut a cattle panel in four foot sections so I could handle it and used them for my tomatoes on t posts !!! Where there’s a will there’s a way right LOL. Also thank you for teaching me how to make sourdough sandwich bread !!!!!!!! Have a great rest of your week !!
@TheGreenBean4 жыл бұрын
Great video ! I do the same with cattle panel for pole beans too but also for cheyote squash , butternut, pumpkins, loofah , melons and more . kzbin.info/www/bejne/l6bLZXuOaJVoac0 Works and looks amazing :)
@danreed49203 жыл бұрын
My dad grew up near Mobile Alabama during the 1920s and 1930s. In the days before air conditioning, you can imagine how hot the house was. The house had a huge wrap-around front porch. I'm not sure what they used for trellis or mesh panels but they grew crops vertically. The entire porch and walkway to the front door were covered with several kinds of food crops including tomatoes and beans. During the depression, they ate the food they grew, of course, and in hot weather, they pretty much lived and slept out on the porch because it was much cooler than inside the house, especially upstairs (bedrooms) and kitchen (wood-fired cookstove).
@melissasullivan16583 жыл бұрын
That sounds lovely! Both shade and snacks! :)
@dannyvelez101211 ай бұрын
How cool! I wonder how they dealt with those southern mosquitos!
@pennygoodall61253 жыл бұрын
Finished my trellis❤️ I love it so much, headed to get more hog panels. Green house is next. Wish I could post my final results. Not bad for 63 yo and working alone. It's not bragging if you back it up, right?
@JustJulesM3 жыл бұрын
👏🏼 Yeah!! I'm proud you have done those posts and panels yourself! I need to lift weights!
@dracoarawn40023 жыл бұрын
You rock, love your positivity. What are you growing this year, I’m growing tomatoes and the extra long 3 foot string bean.
@pennygoodall61253 жыл бұрын
@@dracoarawn4002 I am growing everything, lol. This little project turned into half an acre garden plus 15 large containers
@fromheelstohills3 жыл бұрын
Where did you get the hog panels?
@pamelaremme383 жыл бұрын
Hi Penny, my gosh...I am also 63. I put up 4 of the cattle panels myself. Tilled my garden and have 12 hens and two roosters!!! Lovin life. I am also alone and doing things myself. I even fenced in (myself) T post and welded wire fence 1 1/2 acres of my 5 acre property. Glad there are more healthy active 63 yr olds. God Bless
@yovondahall94282 жыл бұрын
Best trellis ties-cut circles from a leg of a pair of pantyhose-then cut the circle-you now have a tie that is stretchy, won’t harm tender stems.
@buckkylem2 жыл бұрын
Keep a bird bath near your grapes and keep it full. They only eat your berries for the water content. If there is easily accessible water nearby (very nearby) they will go for that instead
@WG18073 жыл бұрын
England here: Good channel you have, just discovered it. So Pole beans (which we call Runner Beans). Your frame is the best idea. Here's what I do. Running East to West set a row of stakes in the ground about 12 - 18 inches apart. The number of stakes depends how many bean plants you want. Set the stakes so they are about 5 foot high, out of the ground. With your back to the stakes and facing SOUTH, set another corresponding row of stakes about 4 or 5 feet away. Make these stakes about 7 foot or 7 foot six inches out of the ground. So you will have two rows of stakes running East to West with the shorter stakes on the North side and the taller ones to the South. Tie in a ridge pole at the tops joining each shorter stake to its corresponding taller stake. These poles (bamboo will do) will obviously be on an ascending angle as they rise from the shorter to the taller side. Plant a bean plant at the base of each short stake. I start mine in pots indoors for a good start and to avoid the slugs that will munch the seedlings as soon as they emerge out of the ground if planted directly from seed. Tie in the bean as it begins to grow up the shorter pole. When it reaches the five foot height start to weave and tie in the plant along the sloping ridge pole. The bean will naturally want to grow in that direction (South), where the sun shines and will make a thick canopy along the ridge poles. By the time the bean reaches the end of the ridge pole, if it's about 5 feet away, it will be the end of the season. You will get an immense crop of bean pods that hang down perfectly inside the structure. Very easy to harvest as you noted. Most people will be able to fit underneath the canopy without bending, particularly on the tall side. The wigwam or tepee method is still traditional here for most people growing beans, but it's just not as efficient or productive or as easy to harvest.
@MFV773 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the thorough instructions!
@LiliansGardens3 жыл бұрын
Vertical gardens really saves gardener energy. No need to walk miles because you have the land. Good gardening
@trevormerivale68823 жыл бұрын
Not just that, but it gives you more room on your land for either an orchard or for animals providing you with potentially tonnes of extra food.
@DENNISPS784 жыл бұрын
Love your trellis system. Here in Connecticut zone 6a I do a lot of vertical gardening. I may be eccentric but I grow butternut squash: watermelons an cantaloupes on Aframe trellises with great results. Little insect damage and perfect shaped fruits
@TheGreenBean4 жыл бұрын
I love that !!
@gildatyler84584 жыл бұрын
Wow, I would have thought watermelon and such fruits would be to heavy to grow vertical?
@vickisavage89294 жыл бұрын
Gilda Tyler slings can be used to support large fruits.
@stellaqaustralia3 жыл бұрын
Slings 👍 I’m doing that too 😃
@ariloves103 жыл бұрын
Amazing 👏 seems you can't go wrong going up . Up is up!!!
@donnakkasper66344 жыл бұрын
FYI, use the cattle panels for tomatoes too. We have ours on the panels and we have no problems with blight. They’re now over 12 feet high and we are in the second round of tomato crop. We are 7a/7b so try it. We use stretchy green plant tie, it comes on a roll.
@davidfr9244 жыл бұрын
Here in northern Florida, the "cattle panel" (50inch tall X 16 ft long) at Rural King is $19.99 ea, and at Tractor Supply is $21.99 ea. Both give discounts for bulk or multiple buy. I use them for EVERYTHING {pole & bush & Chinese 3ft long beans, peas, cukes, zucs, squash (including the heavy winter types), loofa, tomatoes, and more}!!!!!! I even use them to keep the potatoes and yams off the ground to allow airflow under them. My yard is full of cattle panel arches. Harvesting them from underneath is so much easier and back saving. They are farmers and homesteaders must-haves. GREAT VIDEO!!! GOD BLESS
@TheGreenBean4 жыл бұрын
I agree , I use them for everything too , except next year will be my first year trying tomatoes on them ! I can"t wait. I never thought about using them to keep potatoes up . I might have to try that also :)
@davidfr9244 жыл бұрын
@@TheGreenBean With my crazy thinking, I took 2 cattle panels and cut off 1 of the ends to make hooks. Then I bent them into a circle and hooked them that way. Your diameter is about 10ft. Then I lined the bottom of the circle with 3/4 to 1 full straw bale deep and lined the walls with about 1ft of straw also. Then I filled in the middle (on top of the straw) with my dirt mix. Planted almost 10# of potatoes. Last year I used a panel over the top of them as I said before. This year I used 1ft of straw on top of them. Last year 10# turned into 60#. I am hoping the same or better this year. Harvesting is neat. I just opened the panels, pulled off the straw (saving the straw to reuse or compost). The dirt was really easy to go thru. This year 3 of these beds for potatoes and 2 for yams. The straw is for better airflow and water flow. and NO WEEDS!!!
@TheGreenBean4 жыл бұрын
@@davidfr924 This is an awesome idea!! I use straw and compost for my potatoes but your round cage to keep it all in and produce more potatoes is an exceptional idea. I will try it next year ....Thanks for the tip :)
@Swagg3r3d3 жыл бұрын
I think you do a good job of showing the fruits of all the hard labor required to get these gardens started. It makes me think back to when I was a kid working in my parents garden and just hating all the bugs, the heat, and having to do manual labor. Now that I am a professional working inside most days I think to myself, "She makes this look so easy. I could do this." Then I think back to when I was a kid and I remember all the labor. This is not an easy lifestyle, but you make it look really enjoyable. Well done.
@archieburson43012 жыл бұрын
Anthony Maiorana...... well for one thing it's obvious that she loves gardening but even when you love doing something it can get tiresome. That's when you've got to have the willpower and the mindset to push yourself even when you don't want to. Melissa K Norris is an exceptionally strong-willed woman to be able to push herself to continue throughout the season while having and taking care of children and her husband as well. Add to that the fact of having some serious health issues through the years makes it even more admirable. The Bible says that a woman like this is far greater than rubies. And any man that has a wife like this lady is very fortunate and blessed! She also takes the time to produce many videos and has produced many videos and is also a great teacher who is easy to understand because of the way that she speaks. I don't know if we even realize how blessed the KZbin World is to have her and . I hope she understands and realizes that we do very much appreciate her and her efforts. May God continue to bless her and her family!!!
@WanieB3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for posting on this subject. I have had c-spine fusion and discovered this past year at a new house that bending over to pick anything is really painful. so this next year its all going up, no bush anything. Im even going to train my squash plants to go up.
@jessicakuhn25432 жыл бұрын
I have lower lumber fusion and I am showing this to my husband...would sure help with not bending!
@pitchfolkmedia9163 жыл бұрын
Wow! Melissa has it all. She's intelligent, well-spoken, knowledgeable, feminine, beautiful, and successful. Her husband is blessed with an amazing wife. Congratulations to you both!
@theasianwitch3 жыл бұрын
nah she just got a lot of white privilege
@Erniesworld3 жыл бұрын
@@theasianwitch Wow Cherry’s comment is pretty rude, obviously one of those oh poor me people that didn’t get enough attention as a child. If she really had it all I doubt she would be doing a youtube channel to try and make more money, never judge people having it all or not you may be surprised if you ever learn what someone’s life is really dealing with. If you can’t be happy for other people you’ll never be happy with yourself. And she’s not white, more of a pinkish hue so maybe she had pink privilege? Cherry, the word “hue” means shade, like a shade of black meaning light black or really black thought you’d like to know since you weren’t privileged enough to go to school yourself.
@michaeldeangelo55993 жыл бұрын
@@theasianwitch Technically, she’s part Cherokee. For reference, go see what the white man did to her ancestors. A history lesson would serve you well. Or, probably not.
@junelewis52662 жыл бұрын
I started using wide strips of fabric from old t-shirts to tie up tomatoes and cucumbers etc. They're soft and stretchy and don't damage the stems at all :)
@etienne_oosthuizen4 жыл бұрын
This might work perfectly in our small Zimbabwean garden ... will try it, thank you ... will share in a video
@shelly7017 Жыл бұрын
Melissa, those are all fantastic tips. I recently moved from Eastern Washington to Essex, NY. A small village in Zone 5. This will be my first time growing a garden on the East Coast. Before I moved here, I lived off the grid on Badger Mountain for 4 years. Prior to that, I lived in East Wenatchee out past Pangborn airport. I became a hobby farmer in 2010 with 2.5 acres. I have raised a lot of meat chickens, laying hens, turkeys( Broad breastfed bronzen and Narragansett). Raised hogs twice, had 4 male alpacs for fiber to spin, and 3 goats. It's been a rewarding experience learning about permaculture practices and raising animals! Happy farming to you and yours, and thank you for the great garden tips!
@jimathey61534 жыл бұрын
OLD LEATHER SMITH here, I live in Texas and grow strawberries, figs,pears, Extremely hot peppers, and tomatoes, grapes next year, suggestion, I painted Red Rocks of different sizes and placed them around the strawberries just before the real berries and had a friend do the same thing 4 his grapes which he hung with string and wire 2 teach the birds and it worked on my berries and on my friends grapes, GOD'S BLESSINGS ✝️⚾🙃
@ariloves103 жыл бұрын
WOW!!!!
@JustJulesM3 жыл бұрын
That is nearly funny but smart! It helped produce more strawberries? 👏🏼
@rootsandtruths4 жыл бұрын
Getting full leafy growth on the arched cattle panel was very beautiful in our backyard garden. 👌 garden
@Christy_D4 жыл бұрын
Just came across this and love it already! Love to see someone sharing good information and not filling up time talking about nothing! Thank you! I am now subscribed
@jakecarr51403 жыл бұрын
love it. I live in Seattle and have been experimenting with vertical gardening because backyards are so small. I didn't realize that people who are not space constrained would want to be so space efficient
@keithdeshong96124 жыл бұрын
We use concrete reinforcing wire to make tomato cages. 6 inch squares and heavy duty for years of reuse and you can make them as tall and wide as you like.
@LouiseBelleau-q3z6 ай бұрын
Wow! This is my first time watching your program! It is wonderful to see one of my people on KZbin showing gardening. I am part of the Cree nation and live in Canada. My garden is very small and I am looking for ways to plant more in my small space. Thank you for the great ideas! Keep up the great work!!!😊
@kirkdeshotel26322 жыл бұрын
Hi Mrs. Melissa , Kirk here : For your tomato 🍅 Raised section : To Give more growing space between the "Wire panels and Plastic cover , Try the ( NOODLES ) that kids play with for pools , these are very Cheap , And can be Zip Tied to the wire panels . Ok just wanted to share that with you , BLESSINGS ALWAYS KIRK'OUT'PEACE
@justsayin56093 жыл бұрын
Particularly enjoyed your practicality in using everyday items for alternate uses; my kind of gardening. Very pleasant presentation and easy to follow/listen to. Good work!
@camw34474 жыл бұрын
Great video and your brussel sprouts look amazing. Hard not to get aphids here in the Pacific Northwest with this crop but your bean shade looks like a winner. I hope your husband appreciates your beautiful hair, it’s absolutely mesmerizing.
@SirSkippy873 жыл бұрын
I grow a lot vertically. Even my squash, zucchini, and cucumbers. At the end of the growing season in late September, my squash look like 8’-9’ tall trees because I remove the old leaves as it grows upwards.. I grow 8-9 varieties of tomatoes every year and 6 ft tall plants ain’t nothing. All my plants reach 15’-17’ tall by late September. The tallest tomato plant I’ve ever grown was a better boy variety and it reached 21’ 5” by late September to mid October! I plant in late February to early March in Georgia, zone 8a 30 miles south east of Atlanta...
@yvonnevansickle534 жыл бұрын
When I put up my ranchpanel arch for grapes, I "wove" the T-posts between a couple of rows of panel squares to attach it. I put the panel on inside of T-posts up high about half way, then pushed the upper part of the panel arch out enough to capture the top of T-post between a row of panel squares and finished pushing panel down to ground. That sucker is not moving regardless of wind with no clips or wiring to posts. Really quite easy to put on or take off as the arch has enough play in it to sway as you need.
@manikamacmahon15494 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for mentioning the zone thing. I'm in zone 9a but also in the Pacific northwest, coastal southern Oregon. Which means I get a lot of conflicting information about what I can grow and when.
@lesliecheaney8864 жыл бұрын
For years we've used those same panels for trellising our tomatoes. Just put them 1.5-2ft off the ground, large square side down, and weave them through as they grow. Great tip to use them for beans!
@paulfadden88343 жыл бұрын
4:00 I was watching a video the other day of a couple who grow potatoes in straw, they cover them with a black sheet to stop the sun from getting to them and when it came to harvesting the plants were already clean, they just took them out of the straw.
@syedburhanuddin82454 жыл бұрын
Smart gardening. You are very talented. Lots of smart ideas. Keep going forward.
@loyalbadams3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for all of your great videos. I love to watch you and see your commitment to growing healthy food. You're the best. You Rock
@PrettyAliceNight4 жыл бұрын
I love my cattle panel arches in my garden too! I have two 12 foot long raised beds and have a cattle panel trellis from one to another on ends. It’s worked great for me so far.
@nartanakuchipudi4 жыл бұрын
I'm a brand new gardener and love growing different types of beans. This year I had to make do with some DIY trellises but next year I'm going to plan ahead and get the cattle panels in place. They look neat and sturdy compared to my twining trellis. Thanks for the informative video. I'm better prepared. I am also in PNW zone 8b.
@herbsthewerd13 жыл бұрын
I really enjoy your videos Melissa. I know it's part of "free" YT content, but it's incredibly nice not to see commercials on your channel!
@lotsofhelpers4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for doing this video. Our climate here on the West Coast of New Zealand is very similar to yours, and I have been planning to do more vertical gardening this year. Your tips are helpful!
@glenndavie54303 жыл бұрын
I have used inverted hockey sticks with 4 foot extender stakes to support my single stem tomatoes the last two seasons. I train the tomatoes to grow to over nine feet tall! It's fun to have a hockey theme in the garden.
@Christian_Prepper2 жыл бұрын
*VIDEO SUMMARY:* *Build a trellis with one cattle/hog panel (4'x16') bent into an arc & staked with two metal stakes (5'), optionally cover with plastic (clear, white, opaque).* *When setting up more than one trellis consider setting them up end to end to create garden tunnels.* *The rest of the video discusses what she grew, when she grew them, how she grew them, & where she's gardening, etc, blah, blah, blah.* *The primary idea of this particular trellis is genius & my wife & I have successfully been growing food on them for 2 years now. Overall valuable video.*
@craigmetcalfe17494 жыл бұрын
Thanks Melissa, I experimented with vertical gardening this year but I either did not have my structures tall enough and indeterminate tomatoes flopped over or I put my vertical trellis up against a brick wall which prevented uneven airflow and I started to battle powdery mildew. The hog panels look like a great idea and are flexible enough to solve my two previously mentioned problems. I like the shade the plastic gives and the option you have of growing outside the frame and inside the frame. Kudos!
@gordonreeder34513 жыл бұрын
Cattle panels! I finally got one this season too ($24.00 at Coastal Farm and Ranch). It worked out so well I'll be adding another next year. I grew sweet peas, and pole beans on mine. When the sweat peas died, I succession planted Kirby Cucumbers and made pickles for the first time. Pickles for the win! I'll have to rearrange mine to make more room for lettuce underneath. I'm just a bit down south of you in Oregon, Zone 6a. Last frost in mid April, All in by Mother's day, First frost late Oct. But yea, Strange spring last year got everything off to a slow start.
@plantgurugangsta72994 жыл бұрын
You are an incredibly fortunate person! I dream of owning land like that! I just got my 1st deck to grow on and I'm elated! Lol # GOALS.😄✌🌱❤
@BeeMusic20243 жыл бұрын
I like when I work hard for things and ppl say I must be lucky to have them 🙂
@bridgetttubbs99593 жыл бұрын
I live in South Mississippi. Lots of rain plus extreme heat and humidity. Plus my ground is low and holds water when we get torrential down pours. Then we may not have rain for weeks. So the shade would be so welcomed. This will be my first garden and yours looks so nice and neat. I-am going to do exactly what you have done thank you for the video and I have to mention the mountains in the back ground are beautiful. No mountains where I live just flat ground and rain from the Gulf of Mexico. 🙂🙂🙂🙂🙂
@blakegressen92603 жыл бұрын
Im sure if you contacted MIgardener you could sell those heirloom beans to them and spread the tarheel bean all over the country!
@seekwisdom51022 жыл бұрын
Tips on the tomatoes. Plant them on both sides of cow panel and tie them to the panel. I use concrete blocks so the panel is 1/2 foot from the ground.It works perfectly
@yadiaag77713 жыл бұрын
I subscribes because I’m also in the PNW and yes I thought it was weird that we got rain pretty much every other day but I also was thankful because I didn’t water anything for months and I loved it.
@elizabethbordeaux27412 жыл бұрын
Oh, Melissa - I love your channel...and I am seriously thinking about signing up for your classes. Might be relocating, so we'll see. Good job!
@AngelErrene3 жыл бұрын
Watching this now in December as Puget Sound Native, everything in my garden died out with the killing frost that came very late this season in October. BUT my Parsley and Sugar Snap peas from my 4th round of plantings are still going, besides my winter greens that is. It's been surprisingly mild this winter. Of course, my winter hardy greens are loving it and I am loving them. Here is to hoping we do get a hard frost that is accompanied by some snow down here and not mostly up in the Olympics/H'oh Rainforest and Cascades in the coming winter months for that snowpack for the summer months.
@foster33163 жыл бұрын
Wow. You came to the same tomato trellising system conclusion i did. I don't high tunnel yet but the system of string and wire works well for me. I subsidize with a little native bamboo also.
@woodspirit985 ай бұрын
Inter- lake- n ..long a sound. Theyre from western NY. There's a town between seneca lake and cayuga lake called Interlaken. Niagara grapes originated in niagra county NY. Both are labrusca types that grow in cooler climates and are generally sweeter. Sometimes referred to as foxy grapes
@jeffpohlman13873 жыл бұрын
Hi. I started using cattle panels last year. You've given me some great ideas. Good job on the videos. Just curious, how many bean plants do you put on each side of the your hog panel arches?
@Julian-zy1em4 жыл бұрын
5 am here and what a lovely voice to hear first thing in the morning 😋😋😋
@amyschultz80583 жыл бұрын
I just found your channel, your homestead is amazing! We live in 7B , Virginia. I'm definitely going to do more trellis this year. Thanks for all the great information.
@stevec26456 ай бұрын
Nice to meet you. Lots of great ideas. A truly stunning garden with lots of hard work and planning. Im in upstate NY where now its just started averaging 50° soil temp. 3rd year trellessing. 16' cattle panel $70 in a local garden center. This will be my second year cucumber cacuzza squash and naysurtium. This year 3 more Japanese style wooded treles's coming. Glad you came up recommended. Thank you.
@Quest4Unknown3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the ideas! Subscribed and I’m here at 3k feet Northern California. So many micro climates here. Thanks
@lindabarrette3 жыл бұрын
Love this video. We hope to try this technique this year at our cottage in zone 4A. Cannot wait to get started. 🤩
@koborkutya73383 жыл бұрын
It's worth growing some bamboo (there are several types, some has no problem with cold climate), it's providing an annual dose of stakes to tie stuff to - e.g. cucumber or tomato. We have a type in our garden that does not get thicker than 1/3 inch but is extremely strong and flexible, grow up to 7 feet+ so you can use it well as vertical part of a trellis (still need a solid frame to tie it to at the top, of course). Last year we also used it to create horizontal frame elements.
@nathanieljebediahcourtwrig45572 жыл бұрын
Which variety do you grow that is that thin?
@koborkutya73382 жыл бұрын
@@nathanieljebediahcourtwrig4557 Dont know about the name, the thickest is like 10mm in diameter but most of them less, normally 6-7mm, about 2m-s long (the longest so far was about 5m). I will try to find out the variety.
@nathanieljebediahcourtwrig45572 жыл бұрын
@@koborkutya7338 Thank you! Me neighbor got 250 bamboo stakes about that thick and 4 feet long. They are super useful
@gwenmangelson2 жыл бұрын
remember that the EASTERN sides of WA and ORE do NOT Get the rain the west coast does
@CleaveMountaineering2 жыл бұрын
we are trying vertical gardening this year with hog panel arches. in the dry west, we're trying to get more plants in the same amount of watered and fenced dirt, plus get some companion planting advantage. hog/cattle 16' panels are in the $30 range. T posts are about $5 each.
@foster33164 жыл бұрын
Tomato cages make it hard to prune tomatoes and pruning for me in East Texas keeps the plants growing longer into the season.
@ant-13824 жыл бұрын
Greetings from Vancouver Island. We have very similar weather, don't usually get a true killing frost until early Oct. Close to sea level. I'm going to try this next year, one more consideration is my disability, picking veggies on a trellis is so much easier than stooping over to get them. Cukes are notoriously hard to spot on the vine, they are masters of camouflage, and if you miss one the next time you pick it's all swollen and bitter. They would be easier to spot when at eye level.
@ponyrang2 жыл бұрын
Wow... !!! My best friend, Great... Awesome... Full watched. Thanks Have a happy day!
@bettydekeyserroberts6911 Жыл бұрын
I'm just now watching this video. In mid Texas by July to August we're putting in our second garden. And hoping it don't burn
@jeffd19194 жыл бұрын
I've constructed trellises from all baling twine. Cantaloupes, cucumbers, squash, & tomatoes all on baling twine trellis. Did have to build frame work w t-posts, wooden stays & poles, but am very happy with the results. Yeah, the twine is repurposed. It was once on hay. I'm pretty good at tying knots. Cage clips work well, too.
@daliacosta7283 жыл бұрын
great advices, defenetely trying , BTW, beautiful land and those mountains on the back,stunning place. suscribing right now.
@brettgoulding26133 жыл бұрын
If I had only the audio I would not of understood a lot as I have never heard of hog panels or pool noodles, but a picture speaks a thousand words.
@thecrazylifeandtimesofacra26293 жыл бұрын
i live in town but i have a huge yard for in town i took out most of the grass and replace it with gardens but i live in pa so im just now planting i worked all day today out there i had a great day i love being out there this is my first year and i went in big so i hope i studied and planned enough to make it worth it
@wickedrocketelvispel2 жыл бұрын
Yay cattle panels! I just got one! Also in the PNW and looking forward to giving vertical growing a try ☺️
@rachelrak45023 жыл бұрын
Your comment about frost dates was so interesting! I live near Madison Wisconsin which is Zone 5a. However, your first and last frost dates make your growing season shorter than here, despite having the zone differences
@qualqui4 жыл бұрын
Thank you Melissa for showing us your COOL vertical garden as well as sharing your expertise and knowledge with us, and from the beauty of your garden, crossing my fingers and hoping ya all get a late frost at October 10th! :)
@ecocentrichomestead67834 жыл бұрын
Yes. You are 7a and average first frost is 2 weeks earlier than here with zone 5a! Our last frost is late may though.
@Wendy420T4 жыл бұрын
Was just going to say the same thing. I'm in 6a and our first Frost isn't until the end of October. The zones are weird.
@HESEDNMERCY3 жыл бұрын
Great video Thank you for taking the time to share your gardening wisdom😊
@vanessacable55902 жыл бұрын
love the view the mountains in the background are beautiful!
@gardeningjunkie22673 жыл бұрын
I love your garden! Beautiful and smart ( I meant the garden but definitely you too 😄), you must be so proud! You are very right about growing zones. I'm in zone 7A NJ, but my last frost date is about the first week of May, and my killing frost is the first week of November. I'm near the water so that makes a big difference.
@theknittedlamb73874 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the inspiration for a gardening spot for next year in my yard...new subscriber from Missouri :0)
@kiltedsasquatch36933 жыл бұрын
In the Finger Lakes Region of NY where that grape originates, it is pronounced "Inter-Lake-N". Excellent YT channel and thanks for some ideas...
@tawnroddey Жыл бұрын
Just FYI, used (clean, of course) pantyhose can be stripped and used to tie up any plants. It lasts forever and never binds up the plants.
@ericmatt23683 жыл бұрын
4x16 hog panels are $22 at tractor supply in southeast Kansas ... love em for grapes berries beans peas...cheers!
@VagabondAnne4 жыл бұрын
I have been growing Cherokee Trail of Tears beans for the last 3 years, in pots, up a 10-foot trellis in a spot that gets afternoon sun, and have had good results. I think in a soil bed they would produce longer and taller, but I only have that space. They are delicious as "green beans", and if you get them while they're thin, there are no strings. When they're bigger they get stringy, but if you keep harvesting them smaller they keep producing. Right now we're having a heat wave here in the SF Bay Area of CA, so they are getting fat and stringy, and anything beyond now will be dry black beans, which are also delicious. They seem to be putting on new beans now after the craziest part of our recent heat wave, but I will save the rest of the beans that come on now for dry beans and seed. I really like these beans, along with several others, and I hope to grow them for many years to come. I wish you good luck with yours! Those trellises look great, for me the challenge is finding a supplier for cattle/hog panels in the SF Bay Area - perhaps we are just too suburban. If I do get my hands on some (like 20 of them!) I will also be growing more Cucuzzi/Serpenti di Sicilia vines on them. They are a climbing gourd eaten as immature fruit, similar to zucchini, except that they do need peeling, and taste even milder than zucchini (Baker Creek has seeds). I just used your Mustard Pickle recipe with them without the thickener, and it came out great.
@beverlyr81522 жыл бұрын
which way do you face the arch for pole beans? are the trellis ends on east and west or north and south? Thanks! Enjoying your videos from Edgewood.
@jacquelinebaxter64202 жыл бұрын
Wow do you people to help harvest all this I sure hope so! Beautiful garden love the vertical growing ideas
@robertrodriguez4622 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the hog panel trellis idea! My project for this year!
@crochetingaroundnewzealand2 жыл бұрын
Love your trellis ideas. The big archways are on my wishlist
@ESF197911112 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU FOR SHARING WITH US ALL YOUR SUCCESS IN GARDENING VERTICALLY AND ALL THE EXTRA UNDERSTANDING FROM YOUR EXPERIENCE ABOUT GARDENING-VERTICALLY :) I'M SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHANEL AND DID A THUMB-UP FOR THE VIDEO :) THANK YOU FROM ISRAEL :)
@NanaNana-fx6mi4 жыл бұрын
Now I know why my pole beans did not grow,I tried to grow them in a hanging planter. So glad you did this video,it helps me a lot. Thank You
@swcreations4u833 жыл бұрын
The trellis system is such a great idea. For pole beans, do you plant them on both sides of the trellis and let them grow and meet in the middle, or do you plant them on one side and let them grow up and over to the other side?
@kdavis49102 жыл бұрын
We're pretty lucky being located on the side of a mountain in zone 5b because frost settles in lower places, so sometimes we can walk out of October without a hard freeze some years. The microclimates are crazy.
@nildaotero2933 Жыл бұрын
Nice video, thanks for sharing your garden, it's beautiful
@dilkycorteling25862 жыл бұрын
This so great. I am going to start a garden next year .... thanks
@fancythat51362 жыл бұрын
I love our hog panels and we just added 8ft goat panels in the beds with only 2 posts.
@RFabs892 жыл бұрын
Hey Melissa. Great video, thanks. You talk about first and last frost dates rather than growing zones. I find that my limitations for growing is more related to warmth and hours of light - do you know any reference system related to warmth and light that can be used in figuring out what fruit and vegetables can be grown?
@fancythat51362 жыл бұрын
I put on 3 hog panels inside my 100 gallon tanks and grew tons of green beans last year. I would love to hear how to control the Japanese beetles other than spending hours smashing them lol
@Crows-m8t3 жыл бұрын
Definitely great info and a good visual to have for my garden planning. I feel like I have SO much I want to plant and a million ideas of what might work but uts only my 2nd year planting a vegetable garden that is sizable.
@arthurg14253 жыл бұрын
I hope you plant everything you want to!
@svallone77252 жыл бұрын
I am trying it this year… trying little yellow and red cherry tomato’s that my beautiful passed grandmother used to always grow… as they were always so sweet and delicious to eat… I hope it works??? I will also try some of your tips. Every bit helps - thank you…🍅👨🌾
@michellerose67214 жыл бұрын
Thank you for clarifying frost dates vs zones! I always get disappointed comparing someone else's annual garden to mine. We r in the same zone but their garden is farther ahead of mine. Frost date, frost date, frost dates! Zones only matter for perennial survival through the average lowest winter temperature. I ALWAYS forget that!😏
@garygreen56704 жыл бұрын
Those mountains in the background are amazing.
@garygreen56704 жыл бұрын
@Marco Polo Thanks.. I would be happy to live in the foot hills. What a beautiful place to live.
@garygreen56704 жыл бұрын
@Marco Polo Well, from my city-dweller's perspective it's all good. I'll take insects to crowds of people and noisy cars, every time.
@antoinettegainous48832 жыл бұрын
I really enjoy your videos. I'm a new subscriber and enjoy your way of speaking. I'll be watching.
@myscrog3 жыл бұрын
Your arm span is your height. So unless you are 4 foot tall that distance between the beds of your trellis looks like it’s finger tip to finger tip and that means it’s a wide as you are tall 😄
@AshleySmith-vl1vm2 жыл бұрын
I will be doing this system this year, super excited... Not sure if this has been answered or not, but how many beans did you plant at the base of the system to grow over the trellis? Did you plant on both sides of the trellis?
@felixchen99393 жыл бұрын
It’s so amazing how you grow pole beans
@Erniesworld3 жыл бұрын
If melissa danced near the pole beans would that make her a pole bean dancer