Tomato plants inevitably need support.
Tomato cage or trellis.
It s easy to see why.
Then it moves on to cover other methods like the post and twine method.
This post gives you tomato trellis and cage ideas but it also gives you the how to and the pros and cons of each.
There are hundreds of gorgeous and tasty varieties available to gardeners that you just can t buy at the grocery store.
If you have some of the old conical cages floating around and are interested in experimenting with them you can join two of them together to make a strange looking but much taller cage.
Tomatoes are one of the top homegrown crops in backyard gardens.
Their tall and relatively flexible stems cannot stand upright on their own especially once they re heavy and laden with fruit.
Without staking and the support from a tomato cage or trellis tomato plants will succumb to their own lankiness and weight.
You can also use the vinespine trellis panels to make a tomato plant cage for indeterminate varieties of tomatoes that are too tall for cages.
In this newspaper article there s a number of cages discussed but the one i ve zeroed in on is the tomato cage stack proposed by a landscape architect.
Homegrown tomatoes taste better because they can be harvested at the peak flavor.
The trellis requires very little space and tomatoes can be planted close together.
You can easily weave the tomato plants through the grid of the trellis as they grow.
It begins by covering cages like the wire mesh and concrete wire mesh cages.