June 18, 2012 | #76 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Brooksville, FL
Posts: 1,001
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Tapout, I wish you lived down here, I could put you to work
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Jan “Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.” -Theodore Roosevelt |
June 19, 2012 | #77 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Byron, GA
Posts: 24
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I guess I don't understand the bending. The CRW comes in rolls so it naturally makes round cages. I bend the end wires back to hold the ends together. It takes me about 15 minutes to make a cage.
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June 19, 2012 | #78 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2012
Location: So California
Posts: 7
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That's fine if you need/want round cages...some of us need rectangles.
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June 19, 2012 | #79 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: s.central kansas
Posts: 35
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i use a 1x2 about 5-6 ft long-put it in ground on south side and north side about8-10 in deep then tie top and bottom with some fine wire. they can take some really strong winds until they get really big(the plants) then i might put in another stake.with the dominent south winds 2 stakes are usually enough.
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June 19, 2012 | #80 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Den of Drunken Fools
Posts: 38,539
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Quote:
I can see where the square or rectangle would have more room for tomato for a given space taken up. I wish the Texas Tomato Cages were square, I might just have to work on that. For some reason I think the name Texas Tomato Cage puts people off. It has been a dream of mine to produce a real tomato cage that was expandable both vertically and horizontally plus storable and most of all affordable. Worth |
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June 21, 2012 | #81 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2012
Location: NW Indiana
Posts: 355
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Quote:
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July 4, 2012 | #82 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Byron, GA
Posts: 24
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The CRW cages are naturally round. I just bend the wires around the opposite end to hold the cage together. When I get put it on the next year I just unhook the wires and openir up and pull it around the tomato plant and bring the two ends together and hook the two ends together.
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July 30, 2012 | #83 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: newnan, georgia
Posts: 10
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I jsut got a free roll yesterday from the builder. he said are you sure you want a whole roll it is heavy?...lol yes i want to grow more MATERS! I did give myself a slight scratch across my right wrist and when i was moving it across the driveway and dropped it I um well put three deep scratches down the side of her car. Being it is the passenger side and we have two boys I don't think she will put 2N2 together and ask me. sorry ladies. I don't steak mine tie them down etc. when i did my hole for my tomato plant I make it deep and wide, place my plant in and Bary it. Then when it grows more I place my cage around the little plant and bury the plant some more and bury the bottom of the cage making a berm around it. Dirt is on the bottom ring so when the roots start to grow around the bottom ring as the plant gets large it holds it in. the down side to this after a few years they tend to rust and break but you can flip it ever other year and when they get short you stack them on top of each other and use the wire to hold them together. like cans at the store they stack. You could meke your cages like a tepee. just cut the wire like a V or a slice of pizza with a bite taken out of it then you could stack them slide them into each other like the cheap/expensive tomato cages that don't hold a large plant up worth anything... I may try this on my next day off. and use them for pole beans and cucumbers. hmm anything that vines.
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August 7, 2012 | #84 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Parma, Ohio (6a)
Posts: 299
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I've been looking for a place that sells CRW/remesh/etc near me and have not had any luck so far. I may break down and see if Lowes or HD can special order it for me.
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August 7, 2012 | #85 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Byron, GA
Posts: 24
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CRW mesh
Quote:
Byron. |
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August 7, 2012 | #86 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Atlanta, Georgia
Posts: 2,593
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Unfortunately, that wire is too capacious to keep white tail deer snouts out. I have to buy the garden rolls with much smaller openings to preserve my mother's plants. They ate 68 green tomatoes 2 weeks ago, and stripped the plants down to stems. Squirrels on long legs.
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August 8, 2012 | #87 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: San Diego, Ca Zone 10b
Posts: 26
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Quote:
7860 E. Pleasant Valley Rd. Independence , OH 44131 Phone: 216-642-9225 Fax: 216-642-9235 Hours: M-F 7:00am-5:00pm, Sat & Sun Closed |
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August 10, 2012 | #88 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Parma, Ohio (6a)
Posts: 299
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Thank you for the suggestions all. I'll look into them tonight and this weekend!
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February 21, 2013 | #89 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: South Bend, IN
Posts: 104
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Any advice on how to make only a few of these for those of us with small gardens? I really only need six tomato cages, but I want nice sturdy robust ones like these! I'm tired of the wimpy ones. But the rolls are about $100 each, which is great if you're making 20 cages, but lousy cost per unit if you only need six.
Would this work? I see Home Depot sells a wire mesh panel that is 48 x 84 that is $7.50 each. But the problem is how to utilize it and wind up with the right height and circumference. If I bent it the short way around it would be nice and tall but only 15 inches across, which seems too small (people seem to say 20-24"). If I trimmed the long end a bit and bent it the long way, I could hit 20-24" diameter easily, but then it would only be four feet tall...could I stack two of them or would that make the top so weak it would collapse even if secured to a metal rod somehow? The only other way of doing it that I can figure is to clam-shell two of them together upright, so it would be a sheet and a half for each, with the "seam" running vertically so you get 48+24=72 circumference and about a 23" diameter, with two seams joined together. Maybe a pain to make but would it be more stable? I've never made these before so I'd love advice from those with experience what the best way to MacGuiver something for someone who doesnt need to buy a whole roll of the stuff... http://www.homedepot.com/p/t/2020902...1v&R=202090219 |
February 22, 2013 | #90 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Durhamville,NY
Posts: 2,706
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You can stack one on top of the other by wiring them together. You set one on top of the other and at every or every other point where the vertical wire meets the horizontal wire you take a piece of utility wire and wrap it around there and the corresponding point on the bottom one. Twist the wires tight with a pair of pliers and you should be good to go.
With 4' x 7' panels I'd be real tempted to make 2' square cages out of two of them. I'd put a right angle bend in the middle of each panel the long way, then wire the two halves together. When I was done with them for the season I'd cut the tie wires and I lay the two halves nestled together. The six cages would fit in a lot smaller space that six round cages. |
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