Simple, Inexpensive Vine Support

You can spend a lot on garden products like trellises: but you don’t have to. Trellising vining plants improves air circulation by getting them off of the ground and letting them grow vertically. Most vining plants suffer from powdery mildew. Powdery mildew is a fungal disease that can quickly defoliate and kill your plants.

I love growing vining plants like cucurbits (which include melons, gourds, cucumbers and squash) and also members of the legume family (like peas and beans.) These all have issues with powdery mildew. I am always fighting this fungal disease. Air circulation helps slow this disease down, so trellising is a great way to go.

I don’t believe in using wood for structures in the garden. Wood breaks down, kills a tree and wood is more expensive anyway. If you want wood to last it needs to be painted and that means extra work on a yearly basis. I have too many things to do to spend time painting garden supports. I could also use the money on so many other things!

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My answer? I use concrete reinforcing mesh (7’x4′ remesh at lowes is about $9.40). It will hold multiple 20+ lb fruits with ease.

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You will find it in the lumber area with the concrete bags and rebar. It’s laying flat at the bottom of this picture.

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I also use zipties (about $4.72 for 30 in the electrical department)

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around a few metal u posts (about $4.98 each in the garden area under field and farm) to hold it in place.

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I left the length on the zipties to photograph but I’ll go back and cut off the loose ends. (These links are all for lowes but any large hardware store will have these products.)

At the end of the season I cut the zipties, completely remove the concrete reinforcing mesh and rake up the spent plants. It’s simple, it’s cheap, it’s easily removable and it’s strong.

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Last year’s melons

The mesh is spaced wide enough you can reach through it easily. Although, it isn’t wide enough to bring a large melon or pumpkin through. You need to either: pull anything growing through the holes in the mesh to a side you can harvest from (while it’s still small) or make sure you can access both sides.

If you are new to melons I would not trellis them until you get better at judging ripeness. A ripe melon will release from the vine. It will drop and split if you miss harvesting them at the right time. Pumpkin (winter squash), cucumbers and gourds will not drop. To get around this you can create a hammock support with cloth or netting. This will keep whatever you are growing from falling and splitting even if you miss harvesting at just the right time.

Other uses for this include hanging it from a cross beam on a privacy fence. This would work well for flowering vines like morning glory or scarlet runner beans. Just make sure your privacy fence is strong enough to hold what you want to grow on it.

You can cut this into smaller sections and bend them into a triangular or square shape and make tomato cages. They also sell this by the roll so it’s already in a circular shape, but it gets expensive to buy this in 150 foot lengths. It’s still only about 75 cents a foot though, so if you know other gardeners: you could all go in on a roll.

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You can make a tent shape with two sections of remesh with a post on either side of the center to support it. More than likely, you will have to go underneath to harvest things but at 7 feet each, it is doable. It would make a great play area for kids. We’ll be doing this for my kids this year with beans on the trellis.

If you wanted to get fancy: you could dress it up with 2×4’s on either side and even add an arbor to the top, but you’ll be painting the wood every year. If you can’t stand the thought of rust you could always paint it with some Rust-Oleum brand spray paint. I wouldn’t bother, you aren’t going to see the support when something is growing on it and you would need to repaint it every year. Be aware these come rusted so be prepared with old sheets or a tarp if you are putting it inside a larger vehicle.

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My peas are happy climbing mine right now. The mercury has already risen past 90 degrees this week and my cucumbers are in the ground waiting for their turn on the trellis. I love Texas!

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9 thoughts on “Simple, Inexpensive Vine Support

  1. I use string strung between nails on the top and bottom of a fence. I put a row of nails along the top, and another along the bottom, and then zig-zag the string up and down in between. The nails are just pounded in far enough to hold the string slightly out away from the fence. For example, two and a half inch nails might get pounded in an inch, leaving an inch and a half sticking out for the string. It works great for beans and cucumbers, although the fence can not be moved from year to year like the beans should be. I hate fences anyway, so this makes good use of the one that faces south.

    1. I usually grow my melons up the remesh. String is great for beans and I use it with them but it won’t support heavier fruits. My remesh is where I grow peas but then when they’re done my melons are ready to take their place. I agree remesh is really too much support if you are just growing lightweight stuff, but if you have something heavy following it, it’s ideal.

      1. Oh, of course. I do not grow melons because it does not stay warm long enough for them. (It gets really warm for only three days at a time or so, and cools off at night.) When I grow pumpkins, I put them at the very edge of the garden, and let them sprawl round the edge of unused pavement.

  2. I used the big roll of the concrete mesh. It can be forced to roll the other way, up and down, and that gives you any height you want. It does rust, but lasts for years and years. I have tried painting it, and in my opinion, it’s a waste of time and paint. Just be prepared to get dirty when you build tomato cages or take them down. Also, you can buy black zip ties which may show less. A friend used welded wire fence for his tomato cages, but regretted it. It doesn’t rust, but the openings are so small that he couldn’t get large tomatoes through, not to mention his big hand. Never could have gotten a melon through, I’m sure. Most of us who garden are used to getting dirty. It’s a good excuse to play in the dirt after you are too old for mud pies. PS, I’m in the mountains and we had snow on June 22nd, so that heat sounds lovely! Great post! Thank you!

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