flowerbug
Garden Master
i should have also said that with all the rocks and gravel around here having something softer to kneel on or sit on is also very nice.
I think the main reasons behind the diy cages are to maximize the amount of tomatoes you can harvest & not have to manually deal with the plant during the season, whether that be with pruning or tying or staking. It's a type of support that allows you to just set it over the plant and then do absolutely nothing. The cages also give the best protection from sunscald.I don’t really understand how tomato cages work. Do you reach into them from above to prune your tomatoes and then to pick them? How do you stop the cages falling over when the plants get heavy?
As far as I know it’s unusual in UK to grow tomatoes in cages. Under cover mine grow up strings, which is quite a common practice here, and out of doors up a cane supported by a bit of a wooden structure. I do much prefer growing indeterminates though and never quite know what to do with determinate varieties which sprawl everywhere and take up a lot of space. I can imagine cages being useful for those.
That's odd. Maybe they acclimatize quickly. One year of droughty heat conditions and the next generation of some species will be reflecting that. The seed company Potager Ornamental Catherine does this as a practice, plants the seeds and then leaves them. What survives is what seed they collect, even if it's only 5 - 10% of the total planted population. They tell me that within 1 or 2 generations the % of survivors increases dramatically.Miner's Lettuce now in flower.
I'm also noticing something odd about the newest holy basil plants. They don't look quite like the originals (which are still there; basil is perennial if you take it in over the winter,) they don't smell like them, and they don't ACT like them (they handle heat and drying out much better.) But they HAVE to be descendants; I've planted no other basil for at least two or three years.
I suppose insects could have brought pollen from regular basil plants in the neighborhood, but I could have SWORN these popped up while the plants were in for the winter, where there were no insects to do that, (and, probably, no regular basil pollen to do it with). Hmmm.......
Yes, I can imagine all the stones and pebbles are even more uncomfortable than compacted garden soil. Especially for long periods of weeding.i should have also said that with all the rocks and gravel around here having something softer to kneel on or sit on is also very nice.
Sympathies. I do have a love-hate relationship with peonies. Here they always flop and that together with how quickly they’re over makes them constantly frustrating. Brief, flawed beauty.The tragic comedy of life! The peonies last for so short a time even with ideal weather, so it comes as some kind of cosmic humor that juuust as the blooms were opening we got hit with heat in the low 90's, and THEN we get 2 days of rain - kryptonite of the peony bloom. So, not only are they prematurely haggard from heat, sopping wet from the rain but also MUDDY with their heads hung in the dirt. Haha, so much for a *peony show*! Oh well, that is how it goes this year. At least the delphinium are yet to bloom, so not yet wrecked, lol. And I even chopped some of the peonies roots last year so that they'd be less likely to droop in 2025
Thanks for the full explanation. Your cages look splendidly robust and there is great attraction in leaving the plants to do their own thing. As a rather height challenged creature I think I’d struggle with the picking.I think the main reasons behind the diy cages are to maximize the amount of tomatoes you can harvest & not have to manually deal with the plant during the season, whether that be with pruning or tying or staking. It's a type of support that allows you to just set it over the plant and then do absolutely nothing. The cages also give the best protection from sunscald.
But you're right, harvesting can be a hand over hand situation at times, though with the wire at 4 feet tall I can mostly reach over and take what I want. I don't cut any branches, so this gives me the most amount of tomatoes. I have never staked the cages over the tomato plants, and they've never fallen once the tomatoes start to grow in size and connect with the cage. All the pressure is downward in the cage so the tomato plant holds it in place really. But this year I am setting in a bamboo stake beside each and tie wrapping it to the cage just to try it, I have spare bamboo. We've had a bit more wind than usual the last 2 years, especially with the trees gone, so it might be of help if I need them anchored even further.
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