Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (2024)

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Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (1)

My “ultimate tomato cages” at work in the GGWTV garden. There are 24 and counting!

Of all the plants I grow in my edible garden, I have to say, my favorite are tomatoes! But, I don’t love the constant challenge of trying to keep them supported as they get really tall and wild. Yes, I’ve tried just about everything, but nothing worked well enough and at the same time, looked good enough in the garden for my taste…until now. Meet the ultimate tomato cage!

My ah-ha moment cameas I was looking for more uses for those incredibly versatile livestock panels. I use them all around the garden, for supporting vining crops like cucumbers and peas, keeping my goats from eating some of my plants and one of my favorite uses,setting them on top of the beds at planting time for a handy grid template.

Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (2)

One of my favorite uses of these versatile panels is for my planting templates.

So why not use them for supporting tomatoes too? They meet all 7 of my criteria for what it takes to be considered the ultimate tomato cage: sturdy, tall enough, wide enough, rust resistant, attractive, storable, and long lasting.

You get livestock panelsat the farm and tractor supply stores. Each oneis 16 feet long and just over 4 feet wide. They’re made of galvanized metal and super sturdy.

Although I’m sure I didn’t invent this method for supporting tomatoes, I’ve never seen it in use, so my design is just what evolvedthrough trial and error and settling on the ideal size for me. These panels are large enough to adapt to almost any size you prefer.

In my case, I get one complete cage at the height and width I like, with some pieces left over that I can use elsewhere in the garden. That way, the entire panel gets used with no waste. While you might consider the cost of a livestock panel at $20 a bit expensive for a single tomato cage, considering that these will last for years and with all the usable excess pieces, I think it’s a very good deal.

You just need two things to make these cages. One livestock panel for each cage (select the panel style that has a grid pattern approximately 6 inches square).You also need a pair of bolt cutters. My pair cost about $22 at Home Depot and well worth it. I tried a smaller pair but found they made my the palms of my hands sore after a short while of cutting. For the small difference in price and a one-time purchase, the larger size is well worth it.

Here are the steps on how I make the Ultimate Tomato Cage:

1. Place one full livestock panel on a flat surface. A driveway works well. Using a complete panel, count across the width so you have six complete squares and cut away the rest, all the way down the length of the panel.

Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (3)

Large bolt cutters and a flat surface make for quick work.

2. With the width of the long panel now reduced to 6 squares, I count down from one end nine squares, and cut all the way across, just above the horizontal piece at the bottom of this ninth square.

Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (4)

With the width of the original panel reduced to the desired size, now it’s time to cut for the desired height.

I preferthe bottom of this panel to have long vertical pieces that can be driven extra deep into the soilto serve as the anchoring stakes. If you choose this extra deep option, then cut away the horizontal pieces one level up at the 8th square also (the equivalent of two squares deep) as shown below.

Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (5)

Cut away the horizontal pieces, between the vertical pieces. This leaves long spikes to anchor each panel in the soil.

3. I then repeat step 2, starting from the other end of the original panel and count down nine squares. Once you cut across this piece, you now have three remaining pieces. The middle piece is now a nice sized panel with many versatile uses in and around the garden.

The two remaining pieces are what will make up your cage support.

4. Place one of the sections under a piece of straight lumber at least as long as the panel so that three squares are showing against the straight edge of the lumber. I like to have the panel facing up, so the long vertical rib is resting against the edge of the wood edge. This serves as a good guide and support as you bend up the panel from the outside edge towards you until you get a 90-degree angle.

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The edge of a board serves as a good anchor for leverage and a straight guide for bending the panel towards you.

Then simply repeat this process for the other panel.

5. Stand the panels, so the lose spike ends are facing up. Take a secondto straighten each one so when they are set in place in the soil, they all go in evenly.

Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (7)

Taking a few seconds to straighten the ends will make inserting them into the soil much easier.

Now it’s simply a matter of inserting them in the garden bed around each plant so that when both panels are installed, they form a square cage with the plant centered in the middle.

Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (8)

With straight spikes as the anchors, both panels should match up nearly perfectly.

A final but optional step to make it tidy is to secure each piece together with small cable ties. I use 4-inch ties, one at the top, one in the middle and one towards the bottom of each seam. This holds the panels firmly together and gives added stability and a seamless, solid look.

Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (9)

The tomato plants adapt beautifully while growing into their new homes.

That’s all there is to it. These cages are super sturdy, tall enough and just wide enough so as not to crowd the plant but still leave ample room for other cages in the bed. However, if you prefer even a taller or wider cage, a single panel in its original size allows for both.

At the end of the season, cut away the cable ties, separate the panels and stack them in a neat pile until the next time, and for many years after that.

Sowhat do you think? Do you like? How would you improve upon this? I would love to put all the brainpower out there to work. I’m anxious to hear your thoughts!

Links & Resources

Episode003: Growing Epic Tomatoes with Craig LeHoullier

Episode005: What’s Wrong With My Tomato? Mid-Season Care With Craig LeHoullier

joegardener Blog:When is the Best Time to Pick a Tomato?

joegardener Video Blog:How to Top Tomatoes – What to do When Tomato Plants Get Too Tall

joegardener Video Blog:Sunscald-What Happens when Tomatoes are Overexposed

Growing a Greener World® Blog:Meet the Ultimate Tomato Cage Support

Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (10)

About Joe Lamp'l

Joe Lamp’l is the creator and “joe” behind joe gardener®. His lifetime passion and devotion to all things horticulture has led him to a long-time career as one of the country’s most recognized and trusted personalities in organic gardening and sustainability. That is most evident in his role as host and creator of Emmy Award-winning Growing a Greener World®, a national green-living lifestyle series on PBS currently broadcasting in its tenth season. When he’s not working in his large, raised bed vegetable garden, he’s likely planting or digging something up, or spending time with his family on their organic farm just north of Atlanta, GA.

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8 Responses to “The Ultimate Tomato Cage in 5 Simple Steps”

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (16) ngrrsn says:

    June 18, 2017 at 9:07 pm

    Interesting. What size is that wire material for your cages, again? You said the panels are 16′ long and 4′ wide, and to use 1 panel per cage. Well, if I tip it one way, my cage would be 1′ wide on each side, and 16′ tall!! The other way would be 4′ wide per side and 4′ tall!! Could you be a little more specific on the details, please?

    • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (17) Joe Lamp'l says:

      June 25, 2017 at 2:28 pm

      The part you’re missing is that the original panel is cut into two pieces that make up the finished cage, with an additional piece that can be used to make a second, smaller cage (for peppers,etc.). As I wrote in the post and demonstrated in the video, you have to cut the large panel down into the two main pieces which are combined to form each cage.

      Reply

      • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (18) ngrrsn says:

        July 7, 2017 at 10:46 am

        LOL! Man, do I feel silly! Thanks for responding!

        Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (19) ngrrsn says:

    June 19, 2017 at 1:07 am

    Interesting. What size is that wire material for your cages, again? You said the panels are 16′ long and 4′ wide, and to use 1 panel per cage. Well, if I tip it one way, my cage would be 1′ wide on each side, and 16′ tall!! The other way would be 4′ wide per side and 4′ tall!! Could you be a little more specific on the details, please?

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (20) Joe Lamp'l says:

    June 19, 2017 at 8:25 am

    The part you’re missing is that the original panel is cut into two pieces that make up the finished cage, with an additional piece that can be used to make a second, smaller cage (for peppers,etc.). As I wrote in the post and demonstrated in the video, you have to cut the large panel down into the two main pieces which are combined to form each cage.

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (21) Amy J says:

    June 24, 2017 at 9:08 pm

    Its a wonderful idea, is there a better way to be doing this on a larger scale though. My husband & I have farmed organically on a small scale for 20+ years, in November of last year we bought an 83+ acre organic farm in the finger lakes region of NY. Trying to find a way to stake a variety of different size tomato, eggplant and pepper plants (about 400 plants). I thought about using long panels staked with rebar, we have wind usually from the north-west off the great lakes. The wind would push the plants into the panels, they could be tied to them and either bamboo or rebar could be used on the open side for additional support. I thought this may give the added benefit of open area for picking. If we were growing all the same tomatoes, say a determinate variety like Rutgers, I would probably use wood stakes and twine all the way down the row, but we wanted variety for the farm stand & farmers markets and some of the indeterminate types are huge, I cant see making a cage for every plant. Is there a better way?

    Reply

    • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (22) Joe Lamp'l says:

      June 25, 2017 at 2:35 pm

      Hi Amy. I agee. While it would take a lot of expense and work up front, it’s one and done from there on out. I’m not sure many cages seems practical. In my many farm visits around the country where vast amounts of tomato plants are growing, the Florida Weave seems to be the most practical and widely used method when growing many plants. Although I do like you idea of running complete panels along rows and securing each end with a sturdy support. I have seen that option as well on occasion. Good luck.

      Reply

      • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (23) Amy J says:

        June 25, 2017 at 7:57 pm

        Thank you for your reply! This gives us an added option, we found another method that seems to be used as well although I’m not sure how organic this would be considered even though the material is inert. Finnmeadowsfarm.com has a page titled “Our Favorite Way to Trellis Lots of Tomatoes” and they describe how they trellis using horticultural netting with use electric fence insulators for t-posts. This may be a better way for our big ramblers, and also a good option for the cukes. Have you ever seen it in use this way? They seem to believe that it is a better for air flow and picking, although we would need to buy more metal posts & insulators as well as the netting.

        Reply

        • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (24) Joe Lamp'l says:

          June 25, 2017 at 11:21 pm

          Hey Amy. I have seem this system in use. I’m sure it works well. That plastic is tough stuff! Full disclosure, I have never done either method in large scale (or the plastic ever).
          My two-cents is just this – the Florida Weave method is very easy to implement, although you have to come back every so often to add the next layer of weave. But at the end of the season, there’s no issue with storage and dealing with all that plastic netting. Maybe not a big deal at all. Just thinking it through. I’m sure if you fully considered both options you’d have pros and cons of each.
          Perhaps you try both methods during the same growing season and evaluate at the end of the season. That’s what I would do. Good luck.

          Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (25) Amy J says:

    June 25, 2017 at 1:08 am

    Its a wonderful idea, is there a better way to be doing this on a larger scale though. My husband & I have farmed organically on a small scale for 20+ years, in November of last year we bought an 83+ acre organic farm in the finger lakes region of NY. Trying to find a way to stake a variety of different size tomato, eggplant and pepper plants (about 400 plants). I thought about using long panels staked with rebar, we have wind usually from the north-west off the great lakes. The wind would push the plants into the panels, they could be tied to them and either bamboo or rebar could be used on the open side for additional support. I thought this may give the added benefit of open area for picking. If we were growing all the same tomatoes, say a determinate variety like Rutgers, I would probably use wood stakes and twine all the way down the row, but we wanted variety for the farm stand & farmers markets and some of the indeterminate types are huge, I cant see making a cage for every plant. Is there a better way?

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (26) Joe Lamp'l says:

    June 25, 2017 at 6:28 pm

    The part you’re missing is that the original panel is cut into two pieces that make up the finished cage, with an additional piece that can be used to make a second, smaller cage (for peppers,etc.). As I wrote in the post and demonstrated in the video, you have to cut the large panel down into the two main pieces which are combined to form each cage.

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (27) Joe Lamp'l says:

    June 25, 2017 at 6:35 pm

    Hi Amy. I agee. While it would take a lot of expense and work up front, it’s one and done from there on out. I’m not sure many cages seems practical. In my many farm visits around the country where vast amounts of tomato plants are growing, the Florida Weave seems to be the most practical and widely used method when growing many plants. Although I do like you idea of running complete panels along rows and securing each end with a sturdy support. I have seen that option as well on occasion. Good luck.

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (28) Amy J says:

    June 25, 2017 at 11:57 pm

    Thank you for your reply! This gives us an added option, we found another method that seems to be used as well although I’m not sure how organic this would be considered even though the material is inert. Finnmeadowsfarm.com has a page titled “Our Favorite Way to Trellis Lots of Tomatoes” and they describe how they trellis using horticultural netting with electric fence insulators for t-posts. This may be a better way for our big ramblers, and also a good option for the cukes. Have you ever seen it in use this way? They seem to believe that it is a better for air flow and picking, although we would need to buy more metal posts & insulators as well as the netting.

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (29) Joe Lamp'l says:

    June 26, 2017 at 3:21 am

    Hey Amy. I have seem this system in use. I’m sure it works well. That plastic is tough stuff! Full disclosure, I have never done either method in large scale (or the plastic ever).
    My two-cents is just this – the Florida Weave method is very easy to implement, although you have to come back every so often to add the next layer of weave. But at the end of the season, there’s no issue with storage and dealing with all that plastic netting. Maybe not a big deal at all. Just thinking it through. I’m sure if you fully considered both options you’d have pros and cons of each.
    Perhaps you try both methods during the same growing season and evaluate at the end of the season. That’s what I would do. Good luck.

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (30) ngrrsn says:

    July 7, 2017 at 2:46 pm

    LOL! Man, do I feel silly! Thanks for responding!

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (31) David Woodco*ck says:

    May 29, 2018 at 7:45 pm

    Thanks for the idea of using the bolt cutter. I have been using a sawzall and find it very difficult. I will put the bolt cutter on my home depot list.

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (32) MomLovesLacey says:

    June 23, 2018 at 2:32 pm

    This is a great idea but very costly – galvanized cattle panels here in northern Ohio run over $20 each and they’d make just one support as they are only eight feet long and my tomatoes need about two feet across. I purchased a whole roll of concrete mesh from Lowes for about $130, spray painted it black (as I’m not a fan of the rust look) and cut it into pieces of 12 squares-wide lengths (or 72″ x 60″) using bolt cutters. I cut it in such a way that the last square of the 72″ section leaves a “leg” and that is bent to hold the whole thing into a circle form. I also cut away the bottom ring which leaves six inches to stick into the ground and, because it’s very balanced in weight, that has easily held tomatoes that have grown well over 6′ – even in high winds (I come from the Columbia River area of Washington/Oregon and the winds were really strong which is why it’s the windsurfing capital of the US). I’ve even tied on additional two foot lengths at the top and it’s stayed up though sometimes I do have to trim the tomatoes when they get that tall or I can’t get through the garden as they will grow sideways to the next cage. At the end of the season, I just bend back those pieces and lay it all flat until the next growing year and I usually detach the extensions so it’s all in one neat pile for winter. One roll of remesh makes 25 tomato cages that are 5′ tall and about 2 feet across but I had some cages so this year I still had plenty of wire to make pea, bean, and berry/grape trellises too. I’ve used this heavy mesh for about 20 years and the only thing that has happened is that some of the wire “legs” have broken off from repeatedly bending them season after season, and so for those cages I use zip ties to hold them in a circle though most still have enough of the wire to hold them. I do like that the cattle panels don’t rust as the remesh needs to be repainted every five years or so, and the spray paint for the whole roll was fairly costly – about $60, but to make the same amount of supports with cattle panels would have cost me close to $500 dollars which would have negated the whole reason I garden which is to eat organic food for a low cost.

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (33) Joe Lamp'l says:

    June 23, 2018 at 4:02 pm

    That’s a great option and widely popular. I’ve used this system for years as well. But as you said, I’m not a fan of the rusty round cages and I don’t like working with that wire.After 5 years of using my cattle panel style of cage, they are as good as new and stack neatly in a very small footprint off-season.I expect to get a lifetime of use from each cage. So if you assume a 20 year life per cage (and I get 2 cages per panel because I use the leftover pieces to make a pepper cage or for dwarf tomatoes) the cost per year per cage is fifty-cents. While the upfront cost can be hefty, the long term value is fantastic for growing organic food inexpensively.

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (34) Clifford O'Bryan says:

    December 28, 2018 at 1:34 am

    Joe, I thought you suggest putting the cattle panels over raised bed gardens to keep rabbits and squirrels out of the plants. Did remember that correctly?

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (35) Joe Lamp'l says:

    December 28, 2018 at 1:38 am

    yes! The cattle panels have 1001 uses. lay them flat over your raised beds to deter digging critters and cats. Or make cages out of them like this video show. That’s my favorite application. But there are many Clifford!

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (36) Clifford O'Bryan says:

    December 28, 2018 at 1:50 am

    How about rabbits? Will it help keep them from eating lettuces? I am a brand new gardener. Last year I lost all of my lettuce to the rabbits so I put up a fence which worked. But then the squires climbed over the fence and ate the roots of most of my other plants. I have been told that putting ground cyan pepper down will keep both out. Is that true?

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (37) Joe Lamp'l says:

    December 28, 2018 at 1:53 am

    No it won’t. The openings in the panels are too wide to stop rabbits. You need poultry / chicken wire around your plants that you want to protect from rabbits. or even hardware cloth with 1″ square openings. The livestock / cattle / goat panels are for larger critters as protection and best for using to support plants.

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (38) Clifford O'Bryan says:

    December 28, 2018 at 2:50 pm

    I thought so. How about the ground up hot peppers for the squirrels. Does that work?.

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (39) Branden Visser says:

    June 25, 2019 at 5:33 pm

    Joe, i have been so intrigued with all of these. I am a just jumping into serious gardening and I’ve been loving your podcasts and Youtube content. so very helpful. I find myself asking questions in my head as I’m listening and lo’ and behold, you bring up my question very shortly after i think of it almost word for word and answer it. Every time! Thanks for all the educational and fun content.I am looking at these tomato cages and I love the idea! I have piles of these on my farm from an old fence. I’m wondering why you wouldn’t you just cut “short” way 6 squares a piece. then you wouldn’t have to cut “length” wise plus you’d get 2 cages from one panel. Maybe I’m missing something though as I’m sure you have a reason! Thanks!

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (40) Joe Lamp'l says:

    June 25, 2019 at 8:11 pm

    Thank you Branden! So glad you are enjoying all of the content. And really glad you’re getting your questions answered.
    As for the cut question, I probably not understanding it correctly but I determined for my raised beds and need to get 4 cages so that determined the width of each panel to make it work. But really it’s what works best for you. So if how you do it is a good fit, that’s the right thing. I do know there are a number of ways to make this work. For me, I like the height and width of each one as the fit in the beds and I do get a second, shorter panel that works great for my peppers and eggplants.

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (41) Sheila Manz says:

    August 2, 2019 at 6:48 pm

    I love this! Question: do the 6” openings still allow you enough access to prune the plants? I usually trim the lowest branches and then other greenery later to enable air to flow through the plant to keep blight at bay as long as possible. Thank-you for sharing with us!

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (42) Joe Lamp'l says:

    August 5, 2019 at 6:47 pm

    Glad you like this Sheila. And yes, absolutely those 6″openings are plenty big for pruning. I’ve got my hands in there pruning and removing diseased foliage and branches all the time and it is never an issue.

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (43) Alan says:

    August 16, 2020 at 10:58 pm

    Hi Joe – First time here. Think i will subscribe. I have a question. How far apart do you space your caged Determinate tomatoes? Also how far apart do you space your caged Indeterminate tomatoes?

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (44) Joe Lamp'l says:

    August 17, 2020 at 9:03 pm

    Hi Alan. I space both indeterminate and determinate tomatoes 3 ft apart. That allows cages to 36″ apart when I can. 30″ works too but the more room I can provide between plants for light and air circulation is a plus to cut down on diseases and improve production.

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (45) Debbie says:

    May 2, 2021 at 12:44 am

    Hi Joe, We want to make tomato cages using cattle panel however cannot seem to find cattle panel with 6 x 6 openings if this is what we need. HELP please and thank you.Debbie

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (46) Brandi says:

    June 22, 2021 at 1:36 am

    The openings are 6×8

    Reply

  • Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (47) Joe Lamp'l says:

    June 22, 2021 at 11:43 am

    Hi, Debbie. As Brandi noted below, the openings are roughly 6×8. This panel is $23 at Tractor Supply and they stock a lot of these. It usually goes by the name “livestock” panels. But I think it should be the only one priced around $23. They are 16′ long and a little under 5′ wide I think.

    Reply

• Leave a Comment •

Ultimate Tomato Cage | How to DIY | joe gardener® (2024)

FAQs

How do you make a sturdy tomato cage? ›

Concrete reinforcing wire is thick and strong – after all, that's why it makes great tomato cages! The best way to cut it is to use heavy duty wire cutters (like the ones pictured below) that will cut through the thick wire like butter. Heavy duty wire cutters are a must-have when cutting concrete reinforcing wire.

How do you hold tomato plants without cages? ›

1) Stake them

Use whatever stakes you have on hand – wooden stakes, bamboo, metal – just be sure that they're at least 4 feet high. This isn't the easiest method because you need to keep tieing the plant up over the course of the season, but it works and is cheap.

Do I really need a tomato cage? ›

In the case of peppers and tomatoes, you must set up a system so your plant grows upright. If your produce is constantly in contact with the soil, you're only giving way to insects, fungus, and other diseases. This is why having a tomato cage almost becomes compulsory.

Is it better to stake or cage tomatoes? ›

A better choice is to stake your tomatoes. There are stakes available as long as 10 feet. They come in different materials like wood, bamboo, plastic and metal.

What is the best fencing for tomato cages? ›

Heavy galvanized animal-fencing panels (sold as hog wire or horse-corral panels) can be found at most feed stores. Incredibly sturdy—though a bit unwieldy—they are great support candidates. In this case, you may not have to tie the plants at all if the branches are woven in and out of the metal grid.

What is the best height for tomato cages? ›

Cages should be 14-18 inches in diameter with a height of 4 feet for determinate plants and at least 6 feet for indeterminate. Sturdy cages may be expensive to purchase, but can be constructed by hand using cost-effective livestock fencing or concrete reinforcement wire.

What is the cheapest way to support tomato plants? ›

The Cost – DIY Tomato Supports

For the heavy-duty metal T stakes, they run us right at about $5 for a 6 foot tall stake. It's actually a great investment. Not only are they close in price to heavy duty wood posts nowadays, but like the galvanized feedlot panels, they are nearly indestructible.

What can I use to support tomato plants? ›

How to Support Tomatoes
  1. Stake or support tomatoes off the ground to: Avoid diseases. ...
  2. Stakes. This simple support only requires driving a stake into the ground by each plant and tying the plant up the stake as it grows. ...
  3. Tomato Cages. ...
  4. Wire Trellis. ...
  5. Permanent Trellis.

How do you make support for tomato plants? ›

Just drive a 6-foot redwood or cedar 2×2, a length of sturdy bamboo, or a metal T-post about a foot into the ground and plant your tomato about 6 inches away from the stake. As the vine grows, train it to a single stem by gently breaking off any side shoots that emerge from the main stem.

Are cucumbers better on a trellis or cage? ›

Trellised cucumbers are easier to pick and less susceptible to disease. Cucumbers do best if they can climb instead of spread over the ground.

How do you stake tomatoes cheap DIY? ›

For our very first DIY tomato stake, we used a simple wooden stake and a small 18″ wide x 48″ section of welded wire fencing we cut from a roll. Next, we used “U” nails to attach the wire fencing to the post.

Is it better to cage or trellis tomatoes? ›

If you want to grow indeterminate tomatoes in containers, it is best to grow them near a trellis or fence that you can train them up, or use very large pots that will allow large cages. Determinate varieties that I have grown and found to be sturdy enough to not require staking include: Bush Champion (hybrid)

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