Welcome to Cranky Puppy Farm!

This blog belongs to two Gen X-er's smackdab in downtown Kansas City where we've been renovating and decorating two old Victorians built in the 1890's. Our life is filled with 3 demanding Pomeranians (1 of them cranky, of course), honking cars, noisy neighbors and the hustle and bustle of city life but we dream of the day when we can move to our 40-acre farm and hear nothing but the wind and the cows next door. Until then, we're chronicling our triumphs and mishaps here as we try to garden and preserve on 2 city lots, raise chickens, and learn all those things we should have learned from our grandparents. Welcome to our world - we hope you'll stay awhile!

Creative Gardening With Arches

Sunday, May 20, 2012

If you were around last year, you may remember that my cucumbers, watermelons and pumkins took over the whole dang yard in late summer.  They spilled out of the raised beds and across the lawn and, while beautiful, it meant we couldn't mow that area for a month and a half. 

So I spent the winter thinking about what I could do to fix it:  move them to a different location, give them their own bed...hmmm, what to do?  And then I thought "why not go UP?"  And the idea of using arches to do that was born.  As my garden design came together for this year, I thought an arch trellis would be great to allow the cucumbers (on one side) and the spaghetti squash (on the other side) to grow up the trellis over the Contender and Blue Lake bush beans, where they would shelter them from too much sun as the summer heat grows.

I looked and looked and looked some more on Craigslist and elsewhere for some used fence panels, but there were none to be had.  So we loaded up the truck and trailer and headed to Tractor Supply where we snagged a 50" x 16' goat panel.  I have no idea why it's called a goat panel (do you?).

Once we arched it, however, we realized that it was way too tall so we cut off about 4 feet of it.  I'll use that as a trellis elsewhere in the garden.

Cutting the fence panel with a grinder was the fastest way to "get er done".  It only took a couple of minutes.

Cutting the panel left some prongs on one end.  Turns out that it was really useful to stick those down into the ground to make the whole thing more stable.  But we also sank some rebar into the ground and tied the panel to it with metal ties.  When the plants grow up, I can just see it becoming a sail in the summer wind if it's not tied down well.

Click the pic to biggify and you might be able to make out our teeny cucumber plants to the left of the trellis.  They'll be climbing shortly.  Most of the green in the middle of the arch is the bush beans and we noticed yesterday that they have teensy weensy little bean pods on them.

Turns out the panel fit perfectly within our garden bed with about an inch to spare! All that was left was to get the squash started up the trellis. One of the runners was over 3 feet long, so we couldn't have waited much longer to get this trellis in.

Spaghetti squash vining up the new arch. Crossing my fingers that this works!

What kind of creative garden ideas have you used or are thinking about using?  I'd love to hear about them....leave me a comment!






11 comments:

  1. These kind of post are always inspiring and I prefer to read quality content so I'm happy to find many good point here in the post. Writing is simply great! Thank you for the post.

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    1. Wow, thank you for the really nice compliment. You have no idea how much you just made my day. Thanks for stopping by!

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  2. Well done! We love using trellises for our cucumbers, but haven't done it for anything else yet. Can't wait to see how it develops for you. I am stopping by from the Homestead Barn Hop. Have a great week!

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    1. Hi, Becky-

      Trellises seem to work really well for cukes, and I'm really interested to see how well the squash do on it. I checked yesterday afternoon and they are already vining up on it. Can't wait to try some of that spaghetti squash!

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  3. That is a very clever idea--I bet it will work great! I made a trellis for my peas out of long butterfly bush branches that I had to prune out (several broke due to snow damage this year), but I reused them as the uprights and top braces for my pea trellis, tied the uprights together, and then just ran string around the bottom and then up and down. So far it's pretty sturdy, and it adds an interesting structure to the garden.

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    1. Wow. The idea of repurposing those branches is really creative. We had to cut down my beautiful purple butterfly bush last year because it just got too crazy for the space where it was planted. Now I wish I had kept those branches. Thanks for the great tip!

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  4. Not only is this a great way to grow these plants, it looks great, too. You've come up with an excellent solution to your problem- good for you!

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    1. Thanks, Jami! It seems to be working so far as the squash or winding their way up it and the cukes are just getting started. I'm really excited that it's actually working!

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  5. I have been planning to use panels like this for beans, cucumbers, and a variety of other plants. My problems is finding panels and getting them home!
    Do they bend easily or do they need to be heated to make bending easier? Perhaps there are different strengths of metal in some panels? Are goat panels the same as hog panels that I have seen? I better get with the program and purchase some anyway. We finally have decent weather to plant! :~}

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    1. Oh, my...bend easy? Definitely NOT. It took J. and I both laying against it to get it to bend. That metal is pretty strong. I never thought about heating it up, but I bet that would make it easier.

      Goat or hog panels - they seem to be the same guage of metal but the pattern is different. On goat panels, the strips are closer together on one edge that the other. Not sure if that's the top of the bottom. And these are 16 feet long, so be prepared to bend them in your truck bed or take a trailer to haul them. Thanks for stopping by and happy planting!

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