Vertical gardening is a mainstay of the small-space garden. There are many ways to grow plants up instead of out, including a wide array of trellises, arbors, fences, and frames. One of the easiest ways to get both ornamental plants and vegetables to grow vertically is to make a simple climbing post. Here’s how to make one.
There’s no limit on the plants you can use for your pole—just as long as they reach, climb, trail, or lean you can plant nearly anything your heart desires. Here’s a short list to get you’re creativity flowing:
Plants that are true climbers such as clematis won’t need much help from the gardener, although you may want to tuck a stray tendril here-and-there into the chicken wire to offer direction. But plants such as climbing roses, which are actually leaners and don’t have tendrils to help them climb, will need some assistance in growing up the pole. Use twine or garden tape to secure these types of plants.
The advantage to treating your climbing post as a temporary structure is that the garden area becomes flexible as far as a change in garden design, as well as if you’d like to take it down during the winter months after annual plants are spent. On the other hand, if you’d like to plant perennial plants such as climbing roses up the post, then making it as strong as it can be may be the wisest choice.
If you choose to make it a permanent fixture in the garden, after you dig the hole and place the post you’ll want to follow the cement manufacturer’s directions for adding the cement and letting it set up.
The price of your post will depend on which type of wood you choose such as redwood, cedar, or fir. Redwood will last the longest, because it naturally repels the critters that will destroy the wood (cedar, too). A 4″ × 4″ × 8′ will run about $20 and one made of fir will cost about $7. Chicken wire that’s 24″ tall in a 10′ roll is about $7, which is close to the length you'll need for this project. Otherwise, just purchase the shortest length available to you and you’ll have some left over.
Unless your soil is rock-hard, one climbing post will take about a half hour to install. While it’s possible to build the climbing post by yourself, it’s faster and easier with a helper. Remember that your body should be protected even when constructing the easiest of projects. Use the gloves, goggles, and shoes that cover your feet entirely.
Climbing posts can be placed in the yard or garden as a single support, as a pair flanking an elegant garden entrance, or make several and place them in rows creating a bold walkway effect. Happy (vertical) gardening!
by Chris McLaughlin, author of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Small-Space Gardening