Great video. I've heard about the two types, but I have never seen them labeled as such on the little tags at the nursery. Maybe I'm missing something. I don't like using tomato cages either so this year I'm doing a similar method of keeping them growing straight up a pole. I still have about 8 plants left to get in the ground, so I'll try your way. Keep the gardening videos coming.
Let me make sure I understand your question… Are you asking if the strings are straining the plant after fruiting and carrying weight? If so, it does pull on the main stem, but it does not cause damage. I try to wrap under every leaf node so the weight is distributed.
Yes on most of the plant labels. If you look up tomato plant label on google, you'll see some examples. It's usually somewhere on there, but varies as to how prominent it is.
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Great info!!! Thanks!
You're welcome! Thanks for watching!
Love this!!!!❤
Glad it was helpful!
Great info! I've used cattle panels for years and have never used this type of trellising for my tomatoes and you've explained it so well. Intriguing.
Thank you and thanks for watching!
Great video. I've heard about the two types, but I have never seen them labeled as such on the little tags at the nursery. Maybe I'm missing something. I don't like using tomato cages either so this year I'm doing a similar method of keeping them growing straight up a pole. I still have about 8 plants left to get in the ground, so I'll try your way. Keep the gardening videos coming.
Thanks for the kind words and glad it was helpful!
are the strings not staining the the plan after friuting and carrying weight?
Let me make sure I understand your question… Are you asking if the strings are straining the plant after fruiting and carrying weight? If so, it does pull on the main stem, but it does not cause damage. I try to wrap under every leaf node so the weight is distributed.
Is the tomatoe type marked on the container?
Yes on most of the plant labels. If you look up tomato plant label on google, you'll see some examples. It's usually somewhere on there, but varies as to how prominent it is.
@@SevenSparrowsFarm Thank you I had no idea
I use twine too. Will you be able to reuse the tomato twine more than a year?
You could use it more than one season if you want to, but The price is so expensive that you could take it down and recycle it just as easily.