jbosmith
Deeply Rooted
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- Oct 2, 2021
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I hammer in a 4' cedar stake every 5' feet or so, and then push in a 6' bamboo stake every 2.5'. The cedar is to help the bamboo support the stress later in the summer when the beans are up and this is essentially a 60' long sail against the wind.Wow @jbosmith ! What a fantastic photo! I am fascinated by your bean trellis system. Could you post a little about how you did that? Equally amazing is how utterly weed proofed your garden is!
I run baling twine horizontally with one string on the bottom, two in the middle, and one on top, and then verticals every 6 inches or so. I tie the verticals to the top string, run them through the middle two, and attach them at the bottom. I twist the two middle strings back and forth so that it forms a weave like you'd use with tomatoes. I use baling twine because the farmers there know I like it and are always giving me partial rolls that got too wet for their equipment or whatever. I have miles of it.
I like this setup because it's cheap, easy, and strong enough to do the job most years. It's also simple enough that if a bad storm breaks a couple of bamboo uprights, it's patchable.
As far as weeds go, this garden is roughly 60 miles from my house at some friends' farm and I see it for a few hours, once every week or two, during prime weed season. I don't love using all the plastic mulch but it nearly eliminates weeds close to the plants, other than a few clumps of annual grass that take almost no time to deal with. The pathways are mulched with that hay you see, and it comes from a big round silage bale on the left. Those tend to be old, moldy, slimey, and full of worms by the time I get them but they make great mulch. That hay is also the only fertility I have to add to that garden at this point.
There's a section on the far right that's covered in landscape fabric. The dominant field grass there is quack grass, which spreads by rhizome. If it gets into the garden it finds those mulched pathways and think they're just a dandy place to setup a home and make babies. It gets past the hand pulling stage pretty quick and there isn't much to do without chemicals or smothering. Some snuck in on that side so I'm keeping it covered for the year.