Gardening Vertically: Fad, Emerging Frontier or Long-Overlooked Art Form


Sure, it makes sense that there's a buzz about vertical gardening-there are lots more of us to feed these days with much less productive land. "Let's make the best use of our diminishing resources," many are saying. And likely there are also those who dismiss vertical gardening as a fad. Mostly, though, I hear talk about increased yields. However, I suspect there are vertical gardeners like myself who have been surprised by another aspect we hadn't expected.

"Necessity is the mother of invention," is a cliché often quoted, and human food requirements necessitate sponging-up sunlight at smaller and smaller focal points. My wife, Vicki, and I have a small yard, and somewhat out of necessity we began years ago building what began as rather makeshift trellises. Somewhere along our way, it had dawned on us that vining plants, such as cucurbits, those that produce melons, squash, cucumbers and pumpkins, are much like grape vines, their vines produce tendrils that secure to structures so they can climb as they grow.

Commercial farmers still grow cucurbits on the ground, but home gardeners realized long ago that these vining plants are more adapted to growing upward. Of course, home gardeners support cucurbit vines on trellises of all sorts and have devised many ingenious, albeit awkward, means of providing support to heavy melons, pumpkins or squash while they are yet ripening and suspended.

We began to desire a more scientific and artistic approach to vertical gardening and to building a vertical garden structure. We searched in vain for a guidebook to how to build one that is both aesthetic and engineered to be vine-friendly, and finally resigned to sketching our own design and years ago we built our first vertical garden structure. As the next season progressed, we were amazed to see squash and melon vines rise to heights over our heads.

Each year since, we have been delighted by astounding yields and our harvests of both heirlooms and hybrids (see photos at our website). We have harvested mouth-watering melons whose flavors are unmatched by the "store-boughts," and we store enough squash each year that it is mid-April before we cook and savor the last of our trophies. As pleasurable as it is to bite into these orbs of sweetness and palate sensation, though, there is another thrill exclusive to vertical gardening that may eclipse these joys.

Vines grown vertically are artful all by themselves as they twist about and their tendrils reach and spiral. We've observed, though, that with a little pruning and directional coaxing using garden ties, they can be guided to achieve magnificent form and function. Each day of the growing season we can step over to our vertical garden to find wondrous surprises.

The magnificence of vines grown vertically tugs gently at our subtler nature until we begin to awaken to a certain glimpse of the sublime. The joys experienced when tending vines may be akin to what one feels when listening to corn grow during the hush of dawn. I 've fallen into awe sometimes while cultivating and coaxing vines to grow left or right or up or down to fill our garden structure. I am eager already for next season, when I will experiment again with varieties strange to me and surely be amazed anew.

©2005 Steven J. Townsend. All Rights Reserved.

Steve and Vicki Townsend share hundreds of vertical gardening shortcuts and secrets in e-books you can download at http://www.gardensup.com.


MORE RESOURCES:

Dallas Morning News

6 Fort Worth garden shops built their way up on a dream
Dallas Morning News, TX - 14 hours ago
These days he is designing tropical landscapes on golf courses, planting pots for Neiman Marcus and stocking an eclectic nursery with plants and garden ...


Gardening Calendar, updated Nov 19
TCPalm, FL - 16 hours ago
McKee Botanical Garden, Vero Beach, 6-8 pm, Dec. 18-21. $3.50-$6. (772) 794-0601. "Florida Native Landscaping": University of Florida/IFAS Indian River ...


BEHIND OUR STONE WALLS: Ready to face the world
Harvard Post, MA - 12 hours ago
A critical and one of the most difficult skill to acquire in landscaping, and in gardening in general, is pruning. Pruning is not the same as hedging or ...


Library getting touch up from tulip or two
The Huntsville Times - al.com, AL - 21 hours ago
By GREGG L. PARKER Madison Garden Club co-president Rose Berry is proud of the landscaping that greets Madison Public Library patrons. ...


Conservancy building green facility
Pisgah Mountain News, NC - 2 hours ago
In 1973 he began writing and illustrating books on natural history and gardening. Presenter Susan Schunk-Hoover owns Dragonfly Designs, a landscape design ...


Landscape company lands coveted Bog Oak accolade
Belfast Telegraph, United Kingdom - Nov 10, 2008
By Margaret Canning A Belfast landscape gardening business has won a coveted award for its work on a private garden. Cameron Landscapes won the Bog Oak ...


Garden Fair set
Haleakala Times, HI - Oct 29, 2008
Experts will be available to answer landscaping, gardening and tree questions. There will be booths representing the landscape industry, tree-friendly ...


Who Are Texas Master Gardeners and why should you become one?
Marshall News Messenger, TX - Nov 16, 2008
Some of the major projects of the Harrison County Master Gardeners include landscaping the Marshall Visual Art Center, assisting with the planting and care ...


The Weekend Gardener: Sometimes, it's better to take the path of ...
Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX - Nov 16, 2008
... them (gardening being a relatively healthy addiction, I’d rationalize) and plop them in the new plot haphazardly, with no regard to any landscaping ...


Freedom High Takes On A Lowe's Profile
Tampa Tribune, FL - 15 hours ago
Through Lowe's annual community involvement Hero Program, the store contributed $1200 worth of plants, mulch and gardening supplies to spruce up the ...

landscaping gardening - Google News

home | site map
© 2006 TixProduction LLC