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Cattle Panel Trellis - what we like (and don't like) about ours

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  • Опубликовано: 17 июл 2020
  • The things that we like (and a few things that we don't) about our DIY Cattle Panel Trellis, now that we are a few years in.
    Visit www.wellgroundedgardens.com for more product descriptions.
    email-us@wellgroundedgardens.com for more information.

Комментарии • 264

  • @elisabetk2595
    @elisabetk2595 2 года назад +31

    The gal at Roots and Refuge attaches the panels a foot or two off the ground on raised beds, so there's plenty of room to walk under a wider walkway. She uses flat panels (also off the ground, so they are plenty tall) for tomatoes. In general not bringing the trellis to the ground seems to be a good idea - easier to prepare soil between plantings, plus a taller structure.

  • @bbttresidder7224
    @bbttresidder7224 Год назад +4

    Super clear and helpful video and just what husband and I needed to see. Off we go to buy our panels and thank you!

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  Год назад

      Hooray; I’m glad it was useful! Good luck-a few people have talked about how expensive they’ve been, lately 🤞

  • @BlackestSheepB.Barker
    @BlackestSheepB.Barker 3 года назад +6

    Some excellent tips regarding letting the suckers grow above the Determinate variety at an angle. I will consider this this Spring. Just subscribed, thank you

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +2

      Glad it’s useful! I’d love to say that was an intentional idea, but it was very much a reaction to a flood last year-and now something I do on purpose :)

  • @stevegermain1222
    @stevegermain1222 3 года назад +4

    you got great ideas here and I love reading all the a lot of great ideas in there

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +2

      Thanks! Super glad it’s helpful; I love the comments section on this one-lots of good “crowd sourced” tips! 👍

  • @mammastreed5070
    @mammastreed5070 2 года назад +8

    Very helpful. I have one 16’ piece in place and this inspires me to get another. I agree with the downfall of that space being inaccessible with a deeper garden. Such a great idea to put the pollinators there! Thanks!

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад +1

      I’m glad! And yes that’s the one part that irks me-in winter when I take down the panels the depth works really well and I can access from both sides, but in summers it’s awkward. The pollinator strip is a good solution for us

    • @helenbringhurst767
      @helenbringhurst767 Год назад

      @@WellGroundedGardens Q NM
      K

    • @debrapaulino918
      @debrapaulino918 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@WellGroundedGardensWhy did you decide taking down panels a good idea?

  • @judybrocksmith5540
    @judybrocksmith5540 4 месяца назад +1

    Just love what you have done...I am gonna use this for many things, including a climbing Clematis and make it round...with the Cattle Panel and stakes...Thanks so much.

  • @sociopathmercenary
    @sociopathmercenary 2 года назад +6

    We used 5 cattle panels with a 30 inch wide (one rototiller width) bed outside each side. I'm a bit OCD so everything I do is a little overbuilt. Two 8 ft t-posts per panel, 4 clips per post, and I wired each panel together with 14 gauge galvanized wire. Super happy with it

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад +1

      Nice! If you’re going to get obsessive and overbuild, I’d say the garden is the right place to do it. 👍

    • @sandraw9718
      @sandraw9718 Год назад

      Id love to see pics! That sounds like a great build!

  • @happyhome41
    @happyhome41 Год назад +1

    Wow, BIG brain at work here - thank you for sharing !

  • @hummushero9428
    @hummushero9428 2 года назад

    I might have to try this, awesome channel btw. I’m watching all your stuff to get some new ideas!

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад +1

      Thanks! I’m always trying new experiments…if you try something I haven’t covered , please share. :)

  • @susanphillips323
    @susanphillips323 3 года назад +2

    Thank you for the practical advice!

  • @harveyschindler9554
    @harveyschindler9554 3 года назад +34

    When I didn’t have my trailer available, I brought my bolt cutters with me.
    I bought the 16’ and cut it half.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +7

      Somebody else said the same and I am deeply impressed and also depressed that I didn't think of it. I *hate* overpaying for things. Awesome idea!

    • @footballnow123
      @footballnow123 3 года назад +1

      Is that allowed?

    • @harveyschindler9554
      @harveyschindler9554 3 года назад +1

      I’ve done it a couple of times.
      I do not think that the tractor supply near me stocks the 8 footers.

    • @sharonginsburg2762
      @sharonginsburg2762 3 года назад +1

      They were happy to cut mine into any lengths at the hardware store in frequent.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +2

      Your store has way better customer service-I’m jealous!

  • @mintgreen292
    @mintgreen292 5 месяцев назад +1

    Ooo I didn't even think about access from the other side. This helps with my planning so much!

  • @foreversettled9144
    @foreversettled9144 3 года назад +4

    Yes, thank you. Putting these up this weekend.

  • @Ms.Byrd68
    @Ms.Byrd68 3 года назад +19

    I would only change one thing for when I put up mine and that is to ensure a small 'walking' space (one or 2ft) around the *outside* of the trellis to ensure I could harvest from within and without.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +7

      Yeah, the 'dead zone' outside the trellis, that I can't reach easily from the other side of the bed, is the one downside. Works for pollinator plants, but if I had more space I'd consider straight trellises down the middle of the bed, instead of relying on arching it over the walkways.

  • @sandra127100
    @sandra127100 3 года назад +17

    Another idea... I got 16’ panels at Tractor Supply and used wire cutters to cut them to 8’ in the parking lot.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +4

      I only heard about that idea after we'd done this and MAN I wish we had been smart enough to think of it. They're still good value overall, but it irks me to overspend, ever. :)

    • @ritawest2535
      @ritawest2535 3 года назад +3

      They (TSC) cut mine in half for me as well... Courtesy cutting! 😊

    • @sandra127100
      @sandra127100 3 года назад +2

      Rita West nice! I didn’t think to ask em.

    • @TheRainHarvester
      @TheRainHarvester 2 года назад

      You can actually fit a 16 foot in a 5 foot truck bed. RUclips has instructions.

    • @sandra127100
      @sandra127100 2 года назад +2

      @@TheRainHarvester you can also watch some epic fail videos on you tube of people trying to get them out. Easy option for me was cutting them. And by doing that, mine have a different shape than the usual. The ones in my side garden look like a cathedral window shape and the ones in the back have a “flat top” where I bent two of the courses and zip tied them together.

  • @cheekybirdierichard
    @cheekybirdierichard 3 года назад +2

    This is very helpful.
    Thank you

  • @judithstorck5195
    @judithstorck5195 2 года назад +1

    Great tips - thank you. Yes, we just got 6 sixteen footers - yet to be put up - working on new garden beds first - then placement of them. Judi

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад

      I’m jealous! Still too cold here to do much in the garden. Share photos when they’re up!

  • @lawrence6444
    @lawrence6444 2 года назад

    Great video...very helpful!! Thank you.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад

      Thanks! I’m glad it was helpful. Are you thinking of using one as a trellis?

  • @greenhousefun3235
    @greenhousefun3235 3 года назад +6

    I love it. I have one cattle panel. I grow cantaloupe and beans on it. I am getting another for tomatoes and cucumbers.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +1

      I had the same slow, addictive spiral :) I am kind of curious to see how many I eventually build...

  • @ERMAV
    @ERMAV 3 года назад +1

    Very nice set up thank you:)

  • @GoldSkye
    @GoldSkye 10 месяцев назад +6

    Love that you got right to the point.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  10 месяцев назад

      Glad it was helpful!

    • @woodspirit98
      @woodspirit98 2 дня назад

      Yea it only took 4 minutes and 15 seconds in a six minute video

  • @patburgard2115
    @patburgard2115 3 года назад +5

    Very helpful!😃

  • @happypappy
    @happypappy Месяц назад

    Very helpful! Thanks!

  • @alliehunter9896
    @alliehunter9896 3 года назад

    Nice vid. Learned a lot of new tips. Also, you have healthy, pretty hair.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +1

      Glad it was helpful! The hair has definitely taken a downward turn during COVID, but thank you! 😊

  • @IsabellaGraceCosmetics
    @IsabellaGraceCosmetics 6 месяцев назад

    Lovely garden

  • @janesheppard9467
    @janesheppard9467 3 года назад +15

    Love your use of pollinators. The only change I would make would be to widen the tunnel enough to accommodate the pollinators inside the tunnel and leave narrow walkway outside the tunnel for harvesting. The tunnel would be a little shorter which would make produce more reachable.

    • @jeffengel2607
      @jeffengel2607 3 года назад +4

      Shoot, made a similar suggestion before scrolling down to read this. But yeah. Anything short and not too terribly light-hungry would do on the inside there.

    • @Ms.Byrd68
      @Ms.Byrd68 3 года назад +3

      @@jeffengel2607 You also have to ensure the 'pollinators' are not nutrient hungry or 'invasive'. I believe 'Borax' is invasive.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +5

      Borage reseeds like crazy, so yes I have to pull the baby plants on a regular basis. But I've resigned myself to it. :D

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +4

      Others are suggesting the same and I am going to give it a go this year.

    • @debrapaulino918
      @debrapaulino918 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@WellGroundedGardensI had wild mustard appear at edge of border. Saved lots of pods but 2bh it wasn't necessary 😂 I like borage too. I think I will add it in. I've searched and searched for wild yarrow. I think seed packets come from cultivars. What do you say. I think wild anything is better.

  • @gregoutdoors7
    @gregoutdoors7 3 года назад +2

    It was helpful 👍🏻😊

  • @gardencookeat22
    @gardencookeat22 3 года назад +5

    Thanks for this great video! Such practical uses you pointed out. Ive wanted to purchase these but no truck. Im sold to the point im finding a delivery driver! Thanks again

    • @joycemiller7908
      @joycemiller7908 3 года назад +3

      I carried mine on top of my car roof

    • @joanies6778
      @joanies6778 3 года назад +1

      There is a video by Calikim where she and her guy rolled them up and put them in their SUV.

    • @amyhorrocks603
      @amyhorrocks603 3 года назад +3

      We rented a big van for 2 hours to buy them and bring them home -- easy peasy :)

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +5

      We put cardboard on the roof of our car and strapped them VERY securely with bungee chords, anchoring the front and back ends especially so as to avoid 'lift' while driving. We looked like idiots but it worked well.

    • @gardencookeat22
      @gardencookeat22 3 года назад +2

      @@WellGroundedGardens 🤣

  • @eutimiochavez415
    @eutimiochavez415 3 года назад

    Great video thank u

  • @kjtichols
    @kjtichols 3 года назад +5

    I love your garden! What direction do you orient your arches? Reading conflicting information on whether tunnel openings should orient E/W vs N/S. Any advice appreciated! Thank you!

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +8

      We placed the arches with their long axis running east-west to maximize the “face area” that’s facing due south. It means they cast some shade to the north, but we use that to protect things like salad greens so they don’t bolt as quickly. 😁

  • @urbanharvestdfw
    @urbanharvestdfw Год назад

    great info

  • @homermtz
    @homermtz 4 года назад +6

    that tomato tip dropped almost on que to your last comment :).

  • @zedmeinhardt3404
    @zedmeinhardt3404 Год назад +3

    Buy the 16' panels and buy a pair of bolt cutters (few aisles over) and cut them in parking lot.
    Also, they have store use bolt cutters you could ask to use.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  Год назад +1

      I’ve since switched to nylon trellis material but if I ever go back to using large cattle panels, and don’t have a truck, again, then I’m definitely doing that

    • @lovelight9164
      @lovelight9164 5 месяцев назад +1

      I used the whole 16' to create a beautiful full tunnel with plenty of walking space and plenty of room for things to climb. I think this year, I will be using my tunnel area that's already built for flowers and use the second one under my two trees so I can grow plenty of pots as my trees lost several large limbs due to storms so my shade garden is now a sun/shade garden.
      The panels are very worth the money and very easy to put up. I'm 5'0" and I put mine up myself. The hardest part was putting in the posts. Happy gardening.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  5 месяцев назад +1

      @lovelight9164 we moved to a new property, and I think I’m going to use the full 16’ long ones for our trellises, here 👍

  • @irenekeyser2884
    @irenekeyser2884 3 года назад +4

    How about installing trellises about 6 inches away from edge of the bed and plant tomato’s on inside of the tunnel. ,not outside, I also leave some space between panels when I install few of them in the row to get side reach also I would tight trellises a foot above the ground

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +2

      Great idea!!! I think we've got enough height at the midpoint to still walk underneath even with a 'flatter' arch--I may give that a try this year! Thanks!

  • @kristenw2514
    @kristenw2514 3 года назад +5

    One suggestion I may have for the accessibility of your plants growing on panels is to move the panels 6 in. from the edge of the bed and plant on the outer side (closest to you when you're in the walkway). It's hard to see how you've set it up so sorry if that's not helpful.

    • @jeffengel2607
      @jeffengel2607 3 года назад +4

      For that matter: with a 4' deep bed, you could put the trellis base 18" in from the walkway side - second foot-row out from that edge - plant the trellissing plants there and something short inside from them. You'd have an easy enough reach on the other side of the bed and an easy enough one of the walkway side too.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +3

      That's a great idea; somebody else said the same and I think I may try it this year. There's enough height at the midpoint to 'flatten' this out a bit and still walk underneath.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +4

      I was thinking the same if I can still keep enough height to walk underneath (the arch is 3' wide now and would be 6' wide if each one went out 18"). If I can, it'd be a good shady spot to try and extend things like spinach and lettuce in the summer.

    • @jeffengel2607
      @jeffengel2607 3 года назад +2

      @@WellGroundedGardens No reason you can't keep it up near the walkway on one side and deeper on the other to fine-tune the top height and shape too.

  • @richardadd8131
    @richardadd8131 2 года назад

    I painted my cattle pannels and t post olive green they look so much better. I also used t post brackets instead of zip ties they will last years.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад

      Nice! What type of paint did you use? Our T posts are currently a dark green color

    • @richardadd8131
      @richardadd8131 2 года назад +2

      @@WellGroundedGardens I actually used a olive green camouflaged spray paint . It looks so good in the garden the paint is a flat sheen so it blends well with the background.

  • @kelliwood3360
    @kelliwood3360 2 года назад

    Do you move these each year for crop rotation? That's my only complaint about my beautiful cattle panel arches - I have to rotate what I plant there because they're too hard to move.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад +2

      I leave them in the same place at this garden-not because they’re hard to move (I take them down every fall for better access to my fall greens) but because with only the four beds, there’s no other logical place to put them. I make a point of putting in as many families as I can: spring peas before, beans and melons along with tomatoes, and fall peas after. But our new place has room for a much bigger garden and I’ll rotate them, there. Because we used zip ties to hold the panels to the supports, taking them down is as easy as snipping the ties. The hard part is setting the supports in place-at our next place I plan to build slots/sleeves into the beds so I can just drop in the panel supports.

  • @bmwrulesforeternity5218
    @bmwrulesforeternity5218 2 года назад

    A galvanized cattle panel (16 footer) is almost $80 canadian funds here at Buckerfield's stores .. in Canada. That is about $58 per panel ... in USA funds.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад

      The price variance on these things is amazing. Even in this area there’s a wide range across retailers and regions, but the products appear identical. 🤷‍♀️

  • @Sweetp520
    @Sweetp520 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for this vid . I m still learning and have heard that tomatoes and cucumbers should be grown in a diff place every year ....how do you overcome the rotation ?

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад +2

      For this garden (small) rotation isn’t really possible on the trellis without giving up too much growing space. Instead I grow polycultures of multiple plant families to balance the nutrients we are taking from the soil and to avoid creating a “point load” for disease organisms. The trellises usually have sprint peas, then tomatoes, beans, cucumber, watermelon, and some years Malabar spinach on them. Followed by fall peas to add even more nitrogen back to the soil. If I ever have a serious disease outbreak I’ll have to not use them for a few years and plant fumigants in the soil, but so far, so good.

  • @cominginthecloudsforus
    @cominginthecloudsforus 3 года назад +5

    We garden this way (x30) and my biggest complaint is cleaning the dead plants off in the fall. If there is an easy way I'd love to hear. (especially when growing climbing beans)

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +9

      Honestly, same. I have this obsessive habit of pruning the lower levels of things as they grow and that helps, some, at the end of the season. But cleaning off the panels is not at the top of my "fun gardening tasks" list, either. Maybe we could try lighting all of the debris on fire and burning the trellises clean. ;)

    • @paulmoss7940
      @paulmoss7940 3 года назад +10

      @@WellGroundedGardens Nah. Not good for the panels, will rust worse after burn. Let plants dry out, knock off with a broom. Pull up and discard roots. Or pressure wash if possible. Try small reusable carabiners to clip panels together. Keep the metal off the ground. Cheers !

    • @timmmmmmmmmmy1
      @timmmmmmmmmmy1 2 года назад +2

      It's called Fire.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад

      I’m going to let you and Paul Moss debate that one ;)

    • @cindymeyer838
      @cindymeyer838 2 года назад +3

      I use cable ties to connect the cattle panels together. I use wires to connect the panels to the T post. My favorite veggies to trellis is pumpkins, butternut, acorn, spaghetti squash, green beans , cucumbers & zucchini.

  • @jennhoff03
    @jennhoff03 3 года назад

    I'm worried about it getting blazing hot in the Houston heat. I don't want it to fry my plants! Have you had any experience with that?

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад

      Not as bad as Houston but yes; it gets well into the 90s here in the summer and pollen goes sterile at those temperatures, plus tomatoes don’t produce lycopene to ripen. So we’ve got a few weeks where we have poor production. I keep things well watered and I’ll use trellises to cast some shade by planting stuff to the north side of them, but mostly I work on acceptance 😂

  • @cambizkhosravi
    @cambizkhosravi Год назад +1

    I’m curious if your orientation for the trellis. Is it east-west or north-south? I’m planning now and trying to figure that out. Thank you! Looks great

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  Год назад +1

      We built these with the long axis running east-west, to maximize the surface facing due south. It does mean that the north side gets a bit less sun, but I use these mostly in the summer when the sun is almost directly overhead, anyway. I put “needier” things like large heirloom tomatoes on the south side and cherry size tomatoes in the north side.

  • @nshell2714
    @nshell2714 3 года назад

    How difficult is it to remove the determinate plants? Do you remove the at the end of the season?

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +3

      We let everything die off in our first frost (usually mid-October) and then cut the vines at the base, near the ground, and pull down the dead plant material from the panels and add it to our compost. I cut the zip ties to “release” the panels but we leave the T-posts where they are. Cattle panels go in the garage for the winter. I’d say the whole process takes maybe 45 minutes? It’s easy to get the plants off of the trellis once they’ve died back.

  • @danisu768
    @danisu768 3 года назад +3

    Do you have to worry about the height if the plants blocking the sun from the other plants? This is my only concern.

    • @joanies6778
      @joanies6778 3 года назад +1

      Where I live, you have to use partial shade in the summer when it gets too hot for tomatoes a peppers. So, partial shading is good here. It most definitely needs to be condidered.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +4

      I am the same as Joanie S--we do get some shade from the trellis immediately to the north of it (but honestly not much; the trellis is very 'airy' and allows light through, and we prune our tomatoes to single stems). But, it's a good thing for us--we plant lettuce and spinach in that area in the spring, and when summer comes around the shade from the summer crops on the trellis helps create a little microclimate where they don't bolt as quickly from the heat.

  • @nadiah3664
    @nadiah3664 8 месяцев назад

    WOW, I like this trellis. Can you please tell me what the ideal sun orientation is for this? I imagine, that if the sun shines primarily on the long side of the trellis, then the other long side will be shaded by the plants in front of it? Is it better, if the trellis faces the sun with the walk in opening? Thank you

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  8 месяцев назад +2

      A lot of people orient them north-south so that they get even levels of sun; we ran ours east-west and intentionally created different microclimates around them…a “sunnier” side on the south and then a “shadier” side on the north where I could (as an example) plant salad greens to help give them cooler conditions and delay bolting. Depends on your goals…but that’s always the answer 🤷‍♀️

  • @GrahamJ-ct4ti
    @GrahamJ-ct4ti 4 месяца назад

    Thanks

  • @lunalongshadow7510
    @lunalongshadow7510 28 дней назад

    I like how you pronounce Borage - with our Kiwi accent it sounds more like porridge here lol. i'll use your version -sounds eloquent and fancy haha

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  27 дней назад

      I mean; it’s a fancy-looking plant so that’s appropriate 😂

  • @concken1
    @concken1 2 года назад

    What about alignment - how do you align it - east/west or north/south?

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад +1

      We have the long dimension running east-west to maximize the southern exposure. That does mean one side gets more sun than the other, but we use this for summer crops and in the summer the sun is high enough to give plenty of light to even the north side.

  • @suecox2308
    @suecox2308 2 года назад +2

    I was half-expecting you to say that the metal got too hot in the sun and sometimes scorched the tender shoots growing on the trellis. Not a problem?

  • @peggywaters2589
    @peggywaters2589 4 месяца назад

    I really like the look and ease of the cattle panel, but I want to use it to maximize my space. I’m also concerned about the accessibility from both sides of my raised planters. I’m thinking of cutting it down into 2’ X 16’ wide sections for the trellis. 🤔

  • @mattingly1217
    @mattingly1217 3 года назад +1

    I am going to try winter squash on this trellis this year

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +1

      Nice! I did spaghetti squash a couple of years ago and may try it again, this coming year. What are you growing? I've been curious if they could support heavier squashes.

    • @mattingly1217
      @mattingly1217 3 года назад +1

      @@WellGroundedGardens I'm gonna try acorn squishes and the butternut type

  • @marys8165
    @marys8165 3 года назад +3

    I would think about getting some wire before zip ties get to warm and come apart.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +1

      We cut and remove the zip ties at the end of season when we disassemble the trellis (to allow full access to the winter veggies in beds from both sides), so they work well for us. But if somebody wanted them to stay in place for years at a time, UV exposure and weakening could definitely become an issue.

  • @dedebites7378
    @dedebites7378 3 года назад +2

    I’m going to try a trellis like this. Can u show how u put up one???

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +2

      Hi! We did a video on it: ruclips.net/video/LHCSJK_jezU/видео.html. Let me know if that works. :)

  • @samanthabuss2984
    @samanthabuss2984 3 года назад +1

    How is your trellis oriented? Like North south east west?

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +2

      Hi! Its long dimension is east-west, so it presents as much surface area to the southern light as possible.

  • @garlicneggplant9846
    @garlicneggplant9846 2 года назад

    How wide is the pathway they're over? I've got a preexisting 2' wide path between beds and had assumed it wouldn't work with the full panel arched over. Yours appear to go straight up and bend to meet, and that seems much more possible! (If still tight)

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад +1

      They are over a three-foot pathway. We did sort of a Gothic arch shape at the top-I like the look of a full, curved, panel better, but this functions just fine. It does feel a little tight when they’re covered in plants, mid-summer.

    • @garlicneggplant9846
      @garlicneggplant9846 2 года назад

      @@WellGroundedGardens That makes sense, thank you. Maybe I'll end up trying it a foot into each bed at some point.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад +1

      Definitely worth a shot-you could plant salad greens (or other shade-lovers) in that one foot stretch. 👍

  • @billmeyer4427
    @billmeyer4427 Год назад

    Where did you buy the panels from ? 🙏🏼 thank you

  • @shellymcgrew4412
    @shellymcgrew4412 3 года назад +1

    Great video, with important info. Work on getting the sound louder, though.:)

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +1

      Yeah, I know! We shot this one about a year ago and since then I’ve invested in a proper microphone. Glad you liked the content. 👍

  • @kameljoe21
    @kameljoe21 3 года назад

    I have been thinking about doing this excet that I do not see the value in putting in 60 panels/ 15 panels per row. My plan is to just make 5 rows of fence and just trellis everything on it. This would make for a much cheaper option and should work just as well. What do you think? I mainly grow tomatoes, butternut squash, cucumbers and beans. Other than my other crops. I also use the high end weed woven weed barrier which does very well.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад

      So you’re thinking of using the cattle panel as fencing (I am guessing oriented horizontally-about 4’ tall?) and growing up it? Or some other fencing material? If the panels, I think it’d work it’s just going to be shorter.

    • @kameljoe21
      @kameljoe21 3 года назад

      @@WellGroundedGardens Yeah the plan is to just make a few rows of fence with the cattle panels in their normal state. It will be shorter for sure. I have seen bit of other people who have done some short trellis like this and it works out good for them.
      The other thing I forgot to mention if you keep having to replace your zip ties as they age you can always switch to stainless steel one. They run about 100 units for about 10 dollars. If you want to see which ones are the best then look at Project Farm's channel, I think the video is zipties or something along that line. He did a year long test to see how aged zip ties held up. Just a thought!
      Thanks.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад

      Good recommendation, thanks!

  • @ivaricks9993
    @ivaricks9993 3 года назад

    Where did you buy your cattle panels from

  • @conniesapphire5296
    @conniesapphire5296 2 года назад

    Can you set up the cattle panel to be less than 6ft? I live in a community where hoa will be on my neck if it goes above my fence. And I really want to use this in my backyard garden

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад +1

      Yes! They are 50" wide; if you turn them on their side and install them, that way, they'd be just over 4' tall. :)

    • @conniesapphire5296
      @conniesapphire5296 2 года назад

      @@WellGroundedGardens thanks

  • @michaeljordan317
    @michaeljordan317 9 месяцев назад

    Great video. I may have a challenge with the full u shaped trellis since my space isn’t that big and it will create a challenge getting to the middle.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  9 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks! For me I’d only do a curved design like this if it spanned a walkway or access aisle…you don’t want to create a “no man’s land” underneath

    • @michaeljordan317
      @michaeljordan317 9 месяцев назад

      Exactly. I have a small space depth wise (2-3 ft) but it has decent width (10 ft).. The trellis would block me out from accessing soil to apply fertilizer, pull weeds, etc. So thinking maybe I just do 1 side of panel held by 2-3 T posts. I’m wondering if it will be stable if the panel is raised off the ground by 12 inches? Or could it fall over? I plan to hang winter melon which can grow 20-30 lbs each so kinda heavy. That said, I plan to dig the T posts into the ground by 12-16 inches so hoping that is ok.
      Also considering if there’s a way to brace/support the T posts, but unsure right now.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  9 месяцев назад

      @michaeljordan317 Jess at Roots and Refuge built her trellises that way-flat cattle panels attached to t-posts and raised about 18” above the soil. Here’s her video: ruclips.net/video/T5e4wf-QtUo/видео.htmlsi=Tkj9uqQYPl26qqEJ. Your approach is solid l, though winter squash might be too heavy of a load for it…maybe add some diagonal bracing at the base of the T-posts?

    • @michaeljordan317
      @michaeljordan317 9 месяцев назад

      @@WellGroundedGardens Great! Thank you for sharing the video and for the suggestions. Next I’ll need to see what kind of braces could work with T posts.

  • @bluemoon8268
    @bluemoon8268 Год назад

    … I plan to use my panels on the 4’ end caps bridging the walkway between beds to eliminate the hassle of reachability …

  • @michelel1852
    @michelel1852 2 года назад

    Can you use 4 foot t posts instead of 5 foot? I have lots of 4 foot ones.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад

      With the caveat that I am not a structural engineer, I totally think that you could. Our 5’ ones are super sturdy but feel like a bit of overkill

    • @michelel1852
      @michelel1852 2 года назад

      @@WellGroundedGardens thank you

  • @diannew5264
    @diannew5264 Год назад +1

    Yeah make a 2'wXLength of run on ea.side of panels and plant. Space a walk way then a 4'X 8' bed for non climbing

  • @agnesrios7808
    @agnesrios7808 2 года назад

    But where I can buy it? I visited home Depot, Lowe's and some other places and not found It

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад

      We got ours at Tractor Supply Co; you could try there if you have one nearby. The global supply chain issues might also be making these hard to get, right now. Ours was a couple of years ago. Good luck 🤞

    • @milliewilkins2823
      @milliewilkins2823 4 месяца назад

      Tractor supply, rural king, local farming coops

  • @jim7smith
    @jim7smith 2 года назад

    Tip for no trailer or truck for hauling. Take your boltcutter or hacksaw and cut it into the lengths you can haul, right out in the parking lot.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад

      A few others mentioned this and I *really* wish we’d thought of it at the time 🤦‍♀️

  • @slingshoter8783
    @slingshoter8783 3 года назад +2

    Tomato is high in acid. I wonder if any zinc leaches into the fruit when it is touching it. galvanized steel does not meet USDA food-safe serving standards for acidic foods; like tomatoes, pickles, fish and fruit juices.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +4

      Interesting question-i imagine the acid in the interior of a tomato, if you, say, cut it in half and rubbed it on the trellis, could cause zinc to leach in...but the exterior of the fruits aren’t generally acidic. The portions of the plant that touch the trellis are primarily the vine stems and leaves, so it hasn’t been a concern for us. Definitely something to keep in mind for canning jars and food storage containers, though!

  • @Yasminenature
    @Yasminenature 2 года назад

    WOW in Canada they are 100 dollars plus delivery. We don’t have 8 foot ones.

  • @annadoniza9366
    @annadoniza9366 3 года назад +2

    Where can I buy the trellis I am in the north New Jersey thanks

    • @kristenw2514
      @kristenw2514 3 года назад +3

      I'm in south jersey and I've located them at Tractor Supply Company for the best price. Other farming supply stores can order them in for you at request usually too. You'll need to buy cattle panels and bend them into an arch and secure them on t posts

    • @annadoniza9366
      @annadoniza9366 3 года назад +3

      Thanks for responding .Happy Healthy NEW YEAR 2021

    • @FairieChele
      @FairieChele 3 года назад +5

      I'm over in PA. If you make sure your top has a pitch, you can also cover this with plastic and have it shed snow so you can use it as a greenhouse during winter. Good luck with your garden in 2021!

    • @kristenw2514
      @kristenw2514 3 года назад +2

      @@FairieChele ooh that’s a good suggestion and good reason to move the bases of the t posts out from the edge of the bed and towards the center

    • @mothratemporalradio517
      @mothratemporalradio517 3 года назад +1

      @@FairieChele hi! Is that what they call "floating cover" or is that something else? Cheers!

  • @gregquigley3000
    @gregquigley3000 2 года назад +1

    I bring bolt cutters and cut the 16 footer in half .

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад

      Several people mentioned that, and I wish I’d thought of it. Badly.

  • @ritawest2535
    @ritawest2535 3 года назад +2

    Great panel but it's $70 for that size in my neck of the woods ☹️(Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada)

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +3

      Whoa!!! That is a serious price difference. There may be other less expensive options that would still work. What kinds of plants are you trying to trellis?

    • @ritawest2535
      @ritawest2535 3 года назад +2

      I grow masses of pole beans and cukes. This year squashes will be trained on them as well. I did purchase the panels on sale($50 each... What a steal!🤪) but I still can't get over the price difference!

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +2

      We’ve used electrical conduit in the past (like this tutorial: ruclips.net/video/TIrEaq49iXQ/видео.html). For me, a ten foot length of the conduit is $3.70. They’re sturdy and only a little more work to put together. 🤷‍♀️👍

    • @jacalli
      @jacalli 3 года назад +2

      Keep an eye on kijiji. I found hog panels on there for 55 for 16ft.

  • @Lochness19
    @Lochness19 2 года назад

    ok so just put cattle panel trellises on narrower beds (or use pollinators), not really a big deal. I have a spot in my side yard that gets decent sun in May-July but then the shadows from the fence and house start to extend deeper into the area in Aug-Oct, but only at ground level. At a height of 5-8ft, there's still good sun, so I'm thinking of putting a cattle panel forest there.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад

      Yeah, exactly-ours is only an “issue” because we use 4’ beds and access them from both sides during the winter (when the trellises are down). Your idea sounds like it should work 👍

    • @Lochness19
      @Lochness19 2 года назад

      @@WellGroundedGardens Have prices gone up a lot in your area since you made this video? Was $22 the standard retail price in your area or did you get a really good deal? The ones I could find were $75 so I'm wondering if those are overpriced or the new normal... Hard to say how much the price for all these things will improve too, how much is due to the current high rate of inflation, how much is due to supply issues, etc.

  • @teenajtx
    @teenajtx 4 месяца назад

    2024 the panels are $48.00 each for a 16 foot by 50 inch panel 4 gauge wire

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  4 месяца назад +1

      I used 8’ panels for this; they’re currently selling for $25 at Tractor Supply in my area (about the same as when I made this) and the 16’ ones are going for $45.

    • @teenajtx
      @teenajtx 4 месяца назад +1

      @@WellGroundedGardens thanks I'll check Tractor Supply. They ONCE had them locally at Home Depot and Lowes.... No longer. They WILL deliver from Lowes. HD says simply not avail in Dallas.

  • @dianekilbourne5734
    @dianekilbourne5734 3 года назад +4

    I attach my panels up about 18” - 2 ‘ up on the t posts.

  • @shrconstruction
    @shrconstruction Год назад

    Anybody reading this....buy the 16' and fold it in the middle to 8'....unfold when you get it home....or even just cut it where you buy it easily with cheap bolt cutters into half.

  • @garyhammond2213
    @garyhammond2213 Год назад

    Priced them today in Fairbanks, AK. $130.

  • @Mach1Greeble
    @Mach1Greeble 2 года назад

    those 8 footers are like $80 in australia

  • @elliottpeabody1287
    @elliottpeabody1287 Год назад

    When you purchased the 8' cattle panels for $17 each, why didn't you just take a pair of bolt cutters to place where you bought them and cut the $20 16' panels and save $14 per trellis?

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  Год назад

      Many others flagged this and MAN I wish I'd thought to bring cutters. I hadn't thought through the issue of transport until it was too late.

  • @michaelkraft6018
    @michaelkraft6018 Год назад +1

    Instead of buying single panels, you can buy a large roll which will fit in the back of an SUV or van

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  Год назад

      At the time we only had small cars-but good tip!

    • @michaelkraft6018
      @michaelkraft6018 Год назад

      @@WellGroundedGardens ah. In that case arrange with Home Depot or Tractor supply for delivery.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  Год назад

      This was several years ago but if I could go back, I probably would do that or take the other suggestion on here and buy a large panel, then cut it in half with bolt cutters

  • @bighammer587
    @bighammer587 3 года назад +1

    But I thought the “suckers” don’t produce fruit (.?)

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +1

      If you root them they will grow into a completely new plant-but I’d recommend doing that at the start of the season so they have time to grow to full size and produce. Or do what we did and train them off to the side as a second main stem. This is for the true suckers (the ones that grow at a diagonal from the intersection of the main stem and a leaf)-not the side leaves :)

  • @MountainGardenGirl
    @MountainGardenGirl 5 месяцев назад +1

    Nothing for nothing, I agree with all you say but learned the levels of cadmium and zinc are elevated around this type of fencing. After of course I spent over 300$ on 16ft panels.

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  5 месяцев назад +1

      Interesting. Ours aren’t in contact with the ground, but I suppose rainwater does wash down them…

  • @denisechavis4820
    @denisechavis4820 3 года назад +3

    Didn’t know tomatoes had suckers I’ve ignored them I guess

    • @BradfordHomestead
      @BradfordHomestead 3 года назад +3

      You can gently break them off, put in water for a couple days and plant. You’ve cloned the original plant. Did it with three of my favorites this past summer

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад +1

      I mean, it's not the end of the world if you ignore them. :) It does help ours avoid diseases if I keep them pruned, and as Bradford Homestead said, they make free plants for you. I did a whole video last summer on rooting suckers--they make really nice, healthy plants. Works for basil, too!

  • @dephif1
    @dephif1 2 месяца назад

    Sometime told me they get hot and hurt the plants

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 месяца назад

      The plants that we grow on it shade the trellis with their leaves and it never gets that hot…it could maybe be an issue with very fast-growing crops as they climb up into the recently unshaded areas? Or maybe if you grew something “low density” that didn’t offer much shade it could happen… but so far we’ve never had that issue.

  • @RobCooper
    @RobCooper Год назад

    $22 ! ! ! !? I pay $150 regular or $99 on sale per panel in Canada

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  Год назад

      Good lord! They increased in price, here, during the post-pandemic inflationary period but nothing close to that! We’re at $42 USD for the 16’-long panels.

  • @pooheadlou
    @pooheadlou 2 года назад

    Nothing you said as to with the trellis it's self, and everything to do with how chose to use it. So I guess it's good to know what not to do.

  • @FBall-im8ui
    @FBall-im8ui 3 года назад

    ???? buy a 16' and use a cable cutter on site to cut them in half and save $12 dah! using a mallet not a good idea, use a pole driver, safer on your fingers

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад

      Other people suggested the same cable cutter idea. Wish we’d thought of it ahead of time! We don’t own a pole driver as we otherwise don’t have a use for one.

  • @mnguyetnguyen-xf2vq
    @mnguyetnguyen-xf2vq 4 месяца назад

    Wow so cheap❤❤❤

  • @Agustin-jo8mv
    @Agustin-jo8mv Год назад

    16 footers are no longer $20. They're like $35 now. 😐😐😔

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  Год назад +1

      I believe it. Construction materials of all kinds went through the roof.

    • @Agustin-jo8mv
      @Agustin-jo8mv Год назад

      ​@Well Grounded Gardens yeah. :/

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  Год назад +1

      We were building a house during the worst of that, and DEFINITELY felt it. :(

  • @mogeking56
    @mogeking56 2 года назад

    I got robbed tractor supply charged me $28 dollars 💸 for a 4x16 foot wire panel they are over charging all of their customers I call it stealing and believe me they want see me again for a very long time 😡

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  2 года назад +1

      Ugh, sorry. The pricing is definitely inconsistent from area to area.

    • @frankmeng7138
      @frankmeng7138 2 года назад

      Well, the price rocketed up a lot and now at $25.99/sheet.

  • @Alexander-dt8sk
    @Alexander-dt8sk 3 года назад

    STOP with the UPspeak!!!!

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  3 года назад

      My top priority at the moment is saying the word “so” less frequently. I’ll add that one to the list. 😉

  • @deanmean3230
    @deanmean3230 5 месяцев назад

    $22... Those are now $37 and during covid in 2021 they were over $50. Bidenomics at work. Let's Go Brandon!

    • @WellGroundedGardens
      @WellGroundedGardens  5 месяцев назад +1

      They’re still currently $22 in my area, same as when I made the video. I think it varies by region. Also, can we not make EVERYTHING about politics…? This is a gardening channel

  • @lunkerpond9765
    @lunkerpond9765 Год назад +1

    2023 pricing at tractor supply
    - 16 foot long = $33
    - 8 foot long = $22