I got tired of remaking my sisal trellice every season, and didn’t like using nylon netting, so I went with something more long term. The downside? Vine removal in the fall will likely be a slog.
I got tired of remaking my sisal trellice every season, and didn’t like using nylon netting, so I went with something more long term. The downside? Vine removal in the fall will likely be a slog.
You should be able to save the mesh, it will just be somewhat labor intensive. I suggest either doing it toward the end of the season when things are still playable or waiting for sprint when things are starting to decintegrate. Hard and dry is difficult.
I do the Florida weave with my tomatoes. They’re not difficult to remove, but again it takes some amount of labor. It’s easier to do when the plants still bend.
This will be the arch’s third year. I do rotate plants around in my rased beds, and have been growing a winter cover crop, but I the arch to things that climb. I do make a point of planting different things in the same spot and work pole beans and snow/snap peas in as well.
It’s the labor intensive I’m worried about right now, next year will hopefully be better if my surgery is done. My only other thought was thicker wires like with yours and take the weed whacker to it >.>
And omfg, sorry side rant, why is everything either a “Florida X” or “California Y”, I don’t get it, it’s common nomenclature for stuff in Canada even.
Yeah that makes total sense, just rotate the stuff around it, little more complicated than I wanted for my garden planner thing I’m using. I’ll see if I can figure it out.
I have no idea why it’s Florida x or California y, but if I had to guess it’s because they’re two of the bigger fruit/veg states. We also have Idaho potatoes (formerly Maine), etc, lol.
A weed whacker might work. Heat might work too, but obviously it will depend what’s supporting the metal structure.