LuckyLuke said:
Pic was just an example from web though .. didn't have mine on hand. But it works fine and you get the idea.
Would love to see a picture, when you get yours all planted out.
LuckyLuke said:
Pic was just an example from web though .. didn't have mine on hand. But it works fine and you get the idea.
Rymerpt said:Wow, smoke got in my eye from that grill BURNSLIKEHELL.
dash 2 said:Florida weave all the way! I used four 7' T-posts, driven about a foot and a half into the ground. I attached 2" wooden poles to the middle two posts and strung polyester clothesline between everything. As the plants got taller, I attached them to the clothesline using foam coated wire (tomato ties).
I had no problems with pinched stems - the foam coated wire distributes pressure really well. Also, driving the T-posts in really deep made it unnecessary to reinforce them with any cross members - they didn't tilt or bend at all. The clothesline sags a little over the course of a growing season, but I don't mind if the plants end up a little shorter. (I'm 6'5" and the top of my trellis is still out of my reach!) As long as I prune the old leaves off my vines, I don't have any problems with ground contact.
Here's a shot of my setup from late last summer.
Notice the two plants on either side of the garage door (a costoluto genovese and a mortgage lifter). Each one ended up being over 12' long by the end of the season. Even when loaded down with the huge amount of fruit they produced, they were held strong by those posts. It takes up virtually no space and now that it's set up, all I have to do next spring is tighten up the lines a little and plant!
P.S. Please ignore the disaster between the tomato plants and the roasting habaneros. Last year the squash bugs and the squash vine borers liked my plants more than I did…
muskymojo said:
Your method looks like it works good, and resembles a florida weave at a glance, but it's not. What you are doing is tying your plants to a pre-existing trellis as they grow. Nothing wrong with that!
With the weave, you actually "weave" the horizontal string around the plants in a way that sandwiches them between two side-by-side strings. As the plants grow you add more and more courses of horizontal string as needed resulting in a "wall" of plants. There is no tying up individual vines or branches. The end result is indeed similar. I am just pointing out the difference is all.
dash 2 said:Florida weave all the way! I used four 7' T-posts, driven about a foot and a half into the ground. I attached 2" wooden poles to the middle two posts and strung polyester clothesline between everything. As the plants got taller, I attached them to the clothesline using foam coated wire (tomato ties).
I had no problems with pinched stems - the foam coated wire distributes pressure really well. Also, driving the T-posts in really deep made it unnecessary to reinforce them with any cross members - they didn't tilt or bend at all. The clothesline sags a little over the course of a growing season, but I don't mind if the plants end up a little shorter. (I'm 6'5" and the top of my trellis is still out of my reach!) As long as I prune the old leaves off my vines, I don't have any problems with ground contact.
Here's a shot of my setup from late last summer.
Notice the two plants on either side of the garage door (a costoluto genovese and a mortgage lifter). Each one ended up being over 12' long by the end of the season. Even when loaded down with the huge amount of fruit they produced, they were held strong by those posts. It takes up virtually no space and now that it's set up, all I have to do next spring is tighten up the lines a little and plant!
P.S. Please ignore the disaster between the tomato plants and the roasting habaneros. Last year the squash bugs and the squash vine borers liked my plants more than I did…
JoynersHotPeppers said:Florida Weave - Goggle it
you are not far from the truth to be honest.Jamison said:They look to good to eat in fact.
Normally, when growing hydroponically on this system, the tomato is kept to one main stem. Some growers will even let the vines down as they grow too high vertically, to keep the main stem growing. (I've seen a few very old indeterminate vines grow up to 40' long) Have you done this in the picture, or does this variety just keep fairly compact?queequeg152 said:you wrap the main stem around the string as it grows upward. every 3 or 4 nodes, you are supposed to put a clip on the stem. I just made a point of clipping them every weekend or so.