Using Natural Materials for Plant Supports

plant supports
plant supports

I’ve recently returned from a wonderful 2-week trip to England. It’s been fun sharing some of the things I saw with you through Facebook over the past few days. I wanted to write about something I repeatedly saw in some of the beautiful gardens I visited. That was the use of natural materials for plant supports and/or keeping pests away from plantings.

I received an overwhelming response to a recent Facebook post. The photo showed the use of branches as an arch down the middle of a vegetable garden. I feel pretty sure you’ll find this interesting and inspiring!

We should make our own plant supports with pruned branches

Think about the amount of pruning we gardeners do, especially in late winter and early spring. It doesn’t take long to end up with a pile of branches, does it? We tend to run them through a chipper, or we take them to the transfer station for green waste recycling. Or perhaps your friends have done a bunch of pruning and have branches they’re trying to get rid of.

plant supports

No matter what the source, wouldn’t it be great to repurpose our prunings into natural plant supports? Take a look through the photos below.

You will notice that many of the amazing gardens I visited were using branches to support plants. Those included sweet peas, broad bean plants that get top-heavy, pole beans and perennials. You can see plenty of examples of this below.

I noticed some of the gardens used the branches to keep problem pests like rabbits or birds away. So the branches were used as physical barriers. You might even have noticed that I laid branches on two raised beds. That was to protect sprouting bean and sunflower seedlings a few weeks ago. It worked beautifully.

The ideas are endless and my mind is already swimming with plans for next year’s garden!

plant supports
plant supports

  

plant supports
plant supports

   

plant supports
plant supports

  

plant supports
plant supports