Plant Supports: Everyone Can Grow a Garden (2021) #18

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 22 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 75

  • @lynnchantler96
    @lynnchantler96 3 роки тому +5

    Love how you and Bill work the garden together, Susan!

  • @valjalava1951
    @valjalava1951 3 роки тому +2

    Always enjoy watching your video ,,always great information

  • @alfredojrtingzon1232
    @alfredojrtingzon1232 2 роки тому +1

    Inspiring vegetable garden video

  • @juliekraft4102
    @juliekraft4102 3 роки тому +4

    Love the creativity of free branches.🥰

  • @Linda-4335
    @Linda-4335 3 роки тому +2

    This video answered several questions I had regarding supporting the supports. Thank you!

  • @nellparry5071
    @nellparry5071 3 роки тому +2

    Just working in my garden at the moment. Great idea Thanks.

  • @juliahamilton2
    @juliahamilton2 3 роки тому +5

    Great informative video as always! Fun to see Bill at work in the garden, too! Thanks for sharing, Susan!

    • @SusansInTheGarden
      @SusansInTheGarden  3 роки тому +1

      He's a sweetie. And now you know he's not a figment of my imagination, LOL

  • @mariansmith7694
    @mariansmith7694 3 роки тому +7

    You are SO VERY BLESSED to have your Bill.

  • @gbltheolechurch5acrehomestead
    @gbltheolechurch5acrehomestead 3 роки тому +1

    🇨🇦🇨🇦Big HELLO!

  • @mariamosher5053
    @mariamosher5053 3 роки тому +2

    Thank you Miss Susan you are beautiful and your garden too

  • @Irishjay-gu5pb
    @Irishjay-gu5pb 3 роки тому +2

    Great ideas!!! Cool, I definitely need your book!! So glad your channel popped up today! You certainly have a new sub out of me! Thanks for the great ideas on the cattle panels!!! I've been wanting to get the 16ft panels, but couldn't get them home, even having a trailer! But tell Bill I owe him one!!! I can't believe I didn't think to use my tie downs to kind of squish them, and lol well tie them down!!! I'm super excited to get to Tractor Supply now! Thanks again! And those bean trellises are very beautiful!...I'll be keeping an eye out for some of those too! 💗🤗👍

    • @SusansInTheGarden
      @SusansInTheGarden  3 роки тому +1

      Thanks so much. I hope you have success getting those panels moved!

  • @greenthumbelina7331
    @greenthumbelina7331 3 роки тому +3

    Susan, the pea supports that you created from branches add a lovely artistic touch to your garden! I think that your Bill is definitely a keeper and he's the other gardener in your family, how wonderful!
    I've already made heavy-duty tomato cages using cattle panels, but I like your idea of using the concrete reinforcing mesh better. That would have definitely been a less expensive option, and it works just as well! (Besides, it's easier to haul.) I will pass this idea along to my daughters, who are both starting raised veggie gardens this year, for the first time. ~Margie

    • @SusansInTheGarden
      @SusansInTheGarden  3 роки тому +2

      I'm glad you enjoyed the video and that it gave you some ideas. The only downside to the concrete reinforcing wire is that it's not galvanized. Even so, it has been lasting great. And yes, Bill is a keeper! I'm very lucky.

  • @dianalieskovsky8729
    @dianalieskovsky8729 3 роки тому +3

    Excellent so beautiful after and before, and so smart. 🥰☺️

  • @karenschwartz5209
    @karenschwartz5209 3 роки тому +2

    Great ideas!!! Thanks.

  • @kathyphilmurphy5517
    @kathyphilmurphy5517 3 роки тому +3

    What a useful topic for the vegetable garden! Those tie downs were really a big help in moving. My favorite is still the bean arbor because they can be easily moved. Thanks for the information.

  • @Nanaslegacy
    @Nanaslegacy 3 роки тому +8

    Looks like Bill lost his fear of the camera! Yay! 😊

    • @SusansInTheGarden
      @SusansInTheGarden  3 роки тому +5

      Well, it's not a fear of the camera, more that he'd rather be behind the scenes! But he was sweet to help me get that arbor moved.

  • @shadyman6346
    @shadyman6346 3 роки тому +3

    Okay, three videos in a row and they are excellent! Subbed...

  • @SoCalKevin
    @SoCalKevin 3 роки тому +3

    Very nice garden layout Susan! I wish those cattle panels were available near me. The closest supplier is almost 100 miles away!

  • @dianebateman6808
    @dianebateman6808 3 роки тому +3

    Great ideas for supports, love your bean trellis! It looks amazing when covered in beans. Thank you for the video, a lot of great information.

  • @truthbetold8915
    @truthbetold8915 3 роки тому +2

    The tie is a great idea to hold down the panels. I'll use it to transport more from the store. Thank you!!

  • @erikjlee1
    @erikjlee1 3 роки тому +2

    Great video! My favorite tomato cage is a 1/3 of a 16' cattle panel bent vertically into a 'V'. Similar to your arbor where the end horizontal bar is cut off so you can stick it right into the ground. No T post needed.

  • @msvida121
    @msvida121 3 роки тому +2

    Woohoo finally received my book!

    • @SusansInTheGarden
      @SusansInTheGarden  3 роки тому

      That is awesome! I hope you will really enjoy it and find it helpful.

  • @bmcdonald7303
    @bmcdonald7303 3 роки тому +2

    Thank you for sharing.

  • @KMcKee-qn6bo
    @KMcKee-qn6bo 3 роки тому +5

    I use the livestock panels for tomato-cages. I use a bolt-cutter to cut “tomato-cage size” pieces. I cut out the bottom horizontal pieces out, to leave the vertical ‘spikes’ to go in the ground. I wire the corners together to hold them in place while they’re in the garden and the wire acts like hinges to allow me to fold them together ‘paper-pamphlet style’ for storage over the winter.

    • @seedrootsprouts2290
      @seedrootsprouts2290 3 роки тому +1

      That sounds like a great idea! Thanks for sharing!

    • @KMcKee-qn6bo
      @KMcKee-qn6bo 3 роки тому +2

      @@seedrootsprouts2290 Well, you’re welcome. It works great for me and is the best option I’ve ever found. I hope it works for you. I use a heavy wire I found in the hardware store and create little loop-hinges, about four on each corner. Tight enough to support, but loose enough to allow the four panel to fold up ‘pamphlet-style’ for storage.

    • @seedrootsprouts2290
      @seedrootsprouts2290 3 роки тому +1

      @@KMcKee-qn6bo I’ll be attempting this!

  • @dianepuskas6362
    @dianepuskas6362 3 роки тому +2

    My copy of your book arrived today! Can't wait to sit down and read through it. Congrats!

    • @SusansInTheGarden
      @SusansInTheGarden  3 роки тому

      Wonderful! I hope you will enjoy it and that it will be a great tool for you.

  • @mariansmith7694
    @mariansmith7694 3 роки тому +2

    Great ideas, thanks.

  • @cqammaz53
    @cqammaz53 3 роки тому +2

    Your garden always looks amazing. It inspires me to work on my garden design as well. Maybe this year I will reach my goal.

    • @SusansInTheGarden
      @SusansInTheGarden  3 роки тому

      You can do it, Carolyn! And what you're seeing is the result of a lot of hard work, believe me!

  • @nicolechew1029
    @nicolechew1029 3 роки тому +3

    Such an great video! I never thought to support tomatoes like that. Thank you!

  • @litaanderson1589
    @litaanderson1589 3 роки тому +2

    hi Susan, happy gardening. You have a very beautiful garden set up I loved your trellises and thank goodness your loving hubby support and giving you a helping hand we women gardener needs a muscles for some of the task in the garden👍. I just made a simple wire fencing hoops for my brassicas. I cut them to a size of 6’ w and 5’ L and give 24 and 1/4 opening for 2 rows planting I just kind of crammed them for more plants. My first time to use floating covers. And used rebar that are webbed and pounded through the opening slots of the fence from 8”to the soil line. Thanks for sharing all your economized useful ideas. From zone 5b in western Michigan.😊🧑‍🌾👍

    • @SusansInTheGarden
      @SusansInTheGarden  3 роки тому +1

      Hi, Lita. It's nice to meet you! Have a great gardening season.

  • @karencooper6634
    @karencooper6634 3 роки тому +3

    wow great idea using the straps to move the panels....I am working alone and have been stalled in how to do this alone...now I can, thanks

    • @SusansInTheGarden
      @SusansInTheGarden  3 роки тому +2

      Well, be careful doing that because they're still rather awkward. Maybe a neighbor could help you?

    • @gpashh
      @gpashh 3 роки тому +2

      Exactly! Not everyone has a wonderful Bill. Lol I'm alone too and have a canopy that I did myself, omg I can't believe I was even able to do it by myself, very difficult. Now I can use the straps, why didn't I think of that. Smh.

  • @carolinebaines8735
    @carolinebaines8735 3 роки тому +1

    Great ideas. Thanks for sharing!

  • @skwall2
    @skwall2 3 роки тому +2

    So much useful information on your channel, always well laid out and clearly explained. I’ve been looking for a sturdy yet attractive way of supporting 3 peony bushes. They are heritage, white double peonies from my mum’s garden that are now over 40 years old. Each clump is 2 feet wide and almost 5 ft high. I’ve been using metal circular grow thru rings on the lower and middle portions, then using a few 5 ft tall wooden stakes and weaving some green plant twine between the peonies and securing to the stakes. Any suggestions for an alternate support system that can remain relatively unseen?

    • @SusansInTheGarden
      @SusansInTheGarden  3 роки тому +1

      Hi, Sandra. This is what I'm going to use on my peonies this year: www.kinsmangarden.com/product/34-Inch-Border-Support. They seemed like they might work better for me. We shall see!

  • @NWMissourigardener
    @NWMissourigardener 3 роки тому +2

    Going to try my pole beans on arbor between my raised beds great idea

  • @gardeningjunkie2267
    @gardeningjunkie2267 3 роки тому +3

    Won't rebar rust?

    • @SusansInTheGarden
      @SusansInTheGarden  3 роки тому +1

      Rebar gets sort of a "patina" of rust but it lasts for years. I like how it will be less noticeable on the outsides of the livestock panel arbor.

  • @j.b.6855
    @j.b.6855 3 роки тому +2

    Growing vertical is an awesome way of making use of garden space. I have three cattle panel trellises that are not arches, and I would love to add more. I just need to figure out how to make them work with containers (totes) as my main focus is sip containers.

    • @KMcKee-qn6bo
      @KMcKee-qn6bo 3 роки тому +1

      Use bolt cutters. Cut panels into useable sizes. Instead of rounded/bent tops, you’ll have two matching panels with the bottoms in the soil; angle the tops toward each other like a two-sided teepee and fasten with wire. Cut ‘end bars’ to leave ‘spikes’ to poke/sink into the soil.

  • @dgymdgym3571
    @dgymdgym3571 3 роки тому +1

    très bonne idée, les cordes pour aider à maintenir au départ! merci de Bruxelles

  • @CarnivoreChristian777
    @CarnivoreChristian777 3 роки тому +3

    Your garden is so beautiful and layed out so well. We used rebar for one of our arbors to get rid of the t-posts and the rebar got so rusty that some of our vines and fruit had rust on them. Should we have used something to treat it or paint it? We would really like to get rid of the t-posts. Thank you!

    • @SusansInTheGarden
      @SusansInTheGarden  3 роки тому

      Hi there. The rebar will get a patina of rust on it but still lasts for years in the garden. We have not painted or treated ours in any way since I don't want to introduce chemicals into the garden if I can avoid it. I will keep an eye on how ours does in the garden this year.

    • @CarnivoreChristian777
      @CarnivoreChristian777 3 роки тому

      @@SusansInTheGarden We used Bio Shields paint for the interior and exterior of our home because it is chemical and toxin free. Would not want chemicals in my garden either but will have to find out if it will still rust painted. I wish we had a patina on ours instead of gobs of rust coming off. Maybe because of our cold winters? I don't think the rust marks on ours plants and a few fruits will hurt the plants but we don't like it on our foods. Someone needs to invent something better then the painted t-posts in my humble opinion. Thank you Susan. Happy Gardening!

  • @amywansing877
    @amywansing877 Рік тому +1

    All of the cattle panels available near us are rusted. Do you use a galvanized version? Thank you! I’ve learned so much from you!

    • @SusansInTheGarden
      @SusansInTheGarden  Рік тому

      Hi, Amy. Thanks so much for your nice comments. Yes, the ones we buy are galvanized. Fairly easy to find at farm stores.

  • @sandybrown3625
    @sandybrown3625 3 роки тому +1

    You are my fav garden guru! Just wanted to ask…. Is it hard to weave the tomato plants through the wire as they get taller and full of leaves?

    • @SusansInTheGarden
      @SusansInTheGarden  3 роки тому

      Hi, Sandy. Thank you! It isn't if I do it while the stems are nice and supple. Otherwise, I end up using jute twine to tie them to the support.

  • @lilycardoso4679
    @lilycardoso4679 3 роки тому +2

    One of my questions was if it is okay to prune the top of indeterminate tomatoes to control the height?

  • @crittergirl3647
    @crittergirl3647 3 роки тому +2

    Another great video. Even sent it to a friend.
    Question about your gorgeous cranberry shrubs, as seen over your arborvitae hedge: What kind of care and maintenance do you give them?

    • @SusansInTheGarden
      @SusansInTheGarden  3 роки тому +1

      Those are American cranberry bush (Viburnum opulus trilobum). They are a native shrub that needs minimal care. Here's some information on them: www.gardeningknowhow.com/ornamental/shrubs/viburnum/highbush-cranberry-plants.htm.

    • @crittergirl3647
      @crittergirl3647 3 роки тому +2

      @@SusansInTheGarden Thank you. Was kinda wondering how you manage yours, are they messy, etc.

    • @SusansInTheGarden
      @SusansInTheGarden  3 роки тому +2

      @@crittergirl3647 Usually the birds eat all of the berries, so I wouldn't say they're overly messy in that regard. The plants do grow about 10' tall.

    • @crittergirl3647
      @crittergirl3647 3 роки тому +2

      @@SusansInTheGarden Thanks for the additional info. I appreciate it.

  • @mygardenhomestead
    @mygardenhomestead 3 роки тому +1

    👍👍🇫🇷😅