How to create home-made Plant supports - a guide to quick as lightning, attractive homemade ones.

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 31 июл 2024
  • Don’t be put off by fancy woven structures you’ve seen for sale, here is a guide to quick as lightning, attractive homemade ones. Bunny shows how to make rose domes, wigwams, edging hoops, a chestnut picket fence, broad bean/herbaceous support grid, delphinium /herbaceous and poles to guide the hose. You can use many plants including hazel, birch, willow, and sweet chestnut - whatever you have or can find locally. If you cut them when dormant they will last longer, but when the sap is rising, they tend to be more pliable. Soaking them in water over night makes them easier to bend. Don’t forget if you stick willow wands in the ground (with the thicker end down) they will root - so strip the bark off the bottom for the length of the wand below ground and a good 150mm /6 “above the soil. Known as ‘Stripping the Willow’!
    #plantsupports #homemadegarden
  • ХоббиХобби

Комментарии • 41

  • @joannmicik1924
    @joannmicik1924 Год назад +5

    Here in the US, I find that our native silver maple (Acer saccharinum) coppices very well. I also use the many small branches shed by my big river birch as plant supports (mostly as pea sticks). I have never tried soaking the dry maple sticks, but will do so now. Thank you for sharing these great ideas.

  • @AJsGreenThumbLLC
    @AJsGreenThumbLLC Год назад +3

    Brilliant Ms. Bunny! I love the rustic look of the supports.... I have so much straight wood laying around and will create several of these throughout the garden. Thanks for the inspiration!😉

  • @lookforward2life
    @lookforward2life Год назад +4

    This was a great video. Love how applicable this is. Thanks!

  • @katemaria1
    @katemaria1 Год назад +1

    Perfect timing! I was just considering coppicing one or two of my elm trees.

  • @saraw8503
    @saraw8503 Год назад +1

    This is a terrific follow up to some research I have been doing this week on rose pegging.

  • @kathrynmettelka7216
    @kathrynmettelka7216 Год назад +2

    My cousin has bamboo she offered me for stakes, and I just started 2 arctic fire and 2 arctic sun dogwoods for their colorful canes. Originally planted for winter interest and floral arrangements, they could also make decorative stakes.

  • @reb4898
    @reb4898 Год назад +1

    Brilliant…I was thinking about using sycamore and you said it at the end. Even though using willow would be easy for me, live next to a river, thinking about it spreading through my garden puts me in a high speed wobble. But we coppice cottonwood for fence posts, burn the in ground portion, and that works beautifully. Red bud, mimosa…this is going to be fun. Thank you

  • @HamCubes
    @HamCubes Год назад +2

    This is so helpful, Bunny!
    Thank you! 👱🏻‍♀️🙏🪴

  • @Mary-fv4bn
    @Mary-fv4bn Год назад +2

    I use bamboo stakes in Lafayette,Louisiana !

  • @blakehahn-atlantaga8510
    @blakehahn-atlantaga8510 Год назад +1

    This was great Bunny! Thank you!

  • @jennifertucker107
    @jennifertucker107 Год назад +1

    Great ideas. Love your attitude. I ordered some willow starts. I want to make a planting of them so i can make a few baskets. Guess i could make tuters as well.

  • @joyscott374
    @joyscott374 Год назад +1

    Some great ideas there thank you

  • @coolredkelpie
    @coolredkelpie Год назад +1

    Thanks for the great tips on creating woven structures. I'm in Western Australia so don't have access to many of the tree materials you suggest however, alternatives can always be found. I have a lot of mature gum trees E. grandis and use the fallen branches in place of your chestnut wood for pea tee pees and grapevines for weaving up and around.

  • @clairemcmorss2406
    @clairemcmorss2406 Год назад

    Thanx for this inspiring episode!

  • @janedonahoe2728
    @janedonahoe2728 Год назад

    Fabo as always 🌿

  • @katella
    @katella Год назад +7

    I envy your ability to just stick something in the ground there. Here in Mallorca the ground is hard, mostly rock and clay.

    • @heidis3993
      @heidis3993 Год назад

      I envy your living in Mallorca!

    • @annbashir5888
      @annbashir5888 Год назад +1

      Give the ground plenty of organic matter theres always so many different containers . I ve made some just from wood I found in the garage

  • @gramermanush1279
    @gramermanush1279 Год назад

    lovely work

  • @pdunn1871
    @pdunn1871 Год назад

    Your Box balls look amazing Thank You

  • @Holly_at_gypsyhollergardens
    @Holly_at_gypsyhollergardens Год назад

    So very clever !!!!

  • @10pinkzebra
    @10pinkzebra Год назад

    Lovely videos, thank you 😊

  • @helenachase5627
    @helenachase5627 Год назад +2

    I've started red Dogwood and a few willows in my yard. Perhaps the red twig will look nice with the willow

  • @emsafdari8336
    @emsafdari8336 Год назад

    Loved ,loved your content you are my great teacher.I am inspired. Thank you.
    Your contribution to humanity is Great ,I Thanked God for You.

  • @elisaangel9789
    @elisaangel9789 Год назад

    I may use some of the tomato cages too.

  • @SpanishEclectic
    @SpanishEclectic Год назад +7

    I've been wanting to get serious about this for years! With the huge rains this year in California, my freesia stems grew very long and flopped. Next year I'll get ahead of them with supports like this. I always love the "Hobbit fences", and pyramids I see in English gardens. I figure you can make most items for free or on the cheap, then save up for a fancy gazebo, arch, or huge trellis for impact. In the past I've screwed in finials from thrift store drapery rods on top of stakes to make hose guides. Here we don't have your terrific selection of trees, but I have mature pecan and mulberry, as well as Golden Rain Trees, which grow very fast; I prune them in winter and end up with hefty sticks between 4ft and 6ft long. Another tree (it may be some type of willow, not sure) has very long, thin pliable branches which will be great for weaving. Thanks for the reminder to soak them. P.S. If you have time, check out the California or Arizona "Superbloom" videos online. The color from the wildflowers and California poppies can be seen from space!

    • @Kay-qt2id
      @Kay-qt2id Год назад +1

      Thanks for the advice re superbloom

  • @therian_forever12
    @therian_forever12 5 месяцев назад

    I love your little chestnut fence around the vegetable garden. I might try something like that, although I don't have chestnut. Maybe with hazel or alder.

    • @bunnyguinness
      @bunnyguinness  5 месяцев назад

      It’s worth knowing that there are 3 main British trees that have durable timber: oak, yew and sweet chestnut. Other timbers such as alder rot down very fast in our climate. Hope this helps 🐇

  • @ameliagfawkes512
    @ameliagfawkes512 Год назад

    Please put something over the tops of the hazel? stakes around the Delphiniums. The thought of someone losing an eye on them (bending down to look or weed, falling on them, etc) gives me the shivers. Any kind of cane topper will do. Bags of pool balls and bath ducks are inexpensive and you just need to melt a hole in the bottom. They're gaudy, but fun if there are children around, however wine corks drilled out and wine bottle screw tops or milk bottle tops glued on are good too. I would just never, ever have naked sticks poking up in the garden like that, unless they're above head height.

  • @meridiefricker4156
    @meridiefricker4156 Год назад +1

    Lovely supports! What are the varieties of Eucalyptus are you growing for foliage please?

  • @Kay-qt2id
    @Kay-qt2id Год назад +2

    Hi Bunny, I’m in Australia and we don’t have willow or beech commonly but lots of eucalyptus. Can I ask what are the varieties you grow for their leaves please?

    • @coolredkelpie
      @coolredkelpie Год назад +1

      I'm in Australia (WA) too and I've planted Eucalyptus. pulverulenta or E. cinerea which are both the silver formed leaf that you see in many floral bunches and displays. E. kruseana is a similar leaf form but that one is not as happy in my WA south-west garden as it's a goldfields mallee and I suspect the southwest winters are a little too damp for it.

  • @bringwhinehouseback
    @bringwhinehouseback Год назад

    I'm about to invest in a hedge trimmer. I'm considering a 12" blade since most of my boxwood borders are only about a foot tall. Does a larger blade make any sense and if so why?

  • @micaelrutledge5176
    @micaelrutledge5176 Год назад +1

    Are hazel wands witch hazel? Sorry for the very basic question.

    • @MrsCookie37
      @MrsCookie37 Год назад

      I want to know this too - or are they Hazelnuts?

  • @fionnflah1846
    @fionnflah1846 Год назад

    What is the tool you use to cut the trees called please?

  • @andrewashdown3541
    @andrewashdown3541 Год назад

    Great - if you just happen have an avenue of birch or oak in the garden ...

  • @DeeCartwright
    @DeeCartwright Год назад

    No sound?

    • @peckinpahlady
      @peckinpahlady Год назад +12

      I can hear it perfectly.

    • @bunnyguinness
      @bunnyguinness  Год назад

      Can’t understand this, can anyone else not hear it please? 🐇