Awesome good work there GG!
You know, apparently, runner beans were originally bought to this country as ornamental, fast growing screening so Henry VIII cound snog Anne Boleyn in private...
(Okay, maybe not snog exactly. They actually said 'woo' but we all know what they really meant!)
Runners with their red flowers and squash with bright yellow...Beautiful
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Originally posted by Bigmallly View PostP.S.............I would put some diagonal bracing in the corners from the bottom front of the planter to the top of the trellis & maybe one in the middle just to give it a bit more rigidity.
What you can't see is the extra thicker (but same width iyswim) bracing on the back that is unseen from the front because it's directly behind certain uprights. It does feel very solid right now but I realise the wind might still have something to say about that! Will bear in mind the diagonals thought. I do have wood left that could be used for this.
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I'd say smother them in "Clematis" a few of mine popped today!
I really, really need to step up a gear here on end this year!Attached Files
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Nice work GG, it's screaming out for climbing Squashes. It'll look brilliant with those huge yellow flowers they grow.
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Wow that's brilliant .
I want some !
If you want something to screen permanent but not grow from inside you could have a pot beside with clematis in to grow along. Otherwise annual climbers for summer, cucs, courgettes, toms
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Ooh, just to add that we are trying a pumpkin and a couple of squashes in a planter, training them up the trellis. No idea if that will work but it's our little experiment
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Wow, I'm seriously impressed GG that's flipping amazing!
I'd try raspberries in it although I'm not sure how much root space they need, so really I'm no help at all
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Want to see what I made? What can I put in it?
After finally deciding what kind of planter I wanted to make (turned out nothing like the original plan ), I got it pretty much finished over the last couple of days.
I made little mini planters from the offcuts which sit in front of the planter to try to help disguise the awful uneven patio surface and the big sloping gap at one end. I still need to make another long one for the other side but I'll need to get another length of £2.99 decking for that as I ran out of wood.
The objective was to try to give us some privacy so I'm not sure yet what to do with the trellis part. I considered stapling some thin screening (bamboo/wicker etc) to the back of it but I'm concerned about increasing the weight. Right now, it's very solid and pretty much immovable, I don't want to make it top heavy. Maybe some windbreak mesh? At least until things grow. I'm just not sure.
I wasn't sure what to grow in it. I don't want to fill it with soil, I just want to sit grow bags in it and use them as pots iyswim. A grow bag will stand up on end quite happily and I can get around 6-8 bags in the planter depending on size/brand.
I put strawberries in the trough in front, so I'm wondering if I should make this the fruit area and put raspberries/blackcurrants in there? Would they be ok in deep grow bags?
Maybe I should just put in Clematis or something? Be glad of any other suggestions. The planter will be in sun pretty much all day. Assuming we get some that is. It's 2.5m long and 1.8m high and the planting area is about 35cm from front to back
Oh and the ivy has a temporary home in pots at either end, at least for now.
Attached FilesLast edited by gardening_gal; 21-03-2019, 12:09 PM.Tags: None
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