Aquawheel.com Aquawheel.com Aquawheel.com
Index Page >> About Us >> Place Your Link >> Privacy >> Terms of Service >> Submit Article
Search:   
Add Url
 
 

Drink & Food

 

People & Society

 

Events & News

 

Shopping Online

 

Home & Garden

 

Entertainment

 

Realty & Property

 

Science & Research

 

Art & Culture

 

Self Enhancement

 

Hygiene & Health

 

Tour & Travel

 

Jobs & Employment

 

Investment & Finance

 

Politics & Government

 

Online & Board Games

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Education & Reference

 

Medical Care

 

Software & Networking

 

Vehicles & Automotive

 

Companies & Business

 

Sports & Adventure

 

Children & Teens

 

Index Page › Home & Garden › Gardens & Horticulture
 

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

 

Sure, it makes sense that theres a buzz about vertical gardeningthere are lots more of us to feed these days with much less productive land. Lets 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 hadnt expected.

Necessity is the mother of invention, is a clich 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. Weve 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.

Author: Steve Townsend
 
Author Bio:
Steve Townsend is an authority in this industry. Steve has written several articles in the past on this subject.
This article can be searched using: horticulture jobs, horticulture therapy, horticulture supplies, gardening, container gardening
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
The Principality of Liechtenstein and Bank Privacy
 
Senior Care Giver Services: When It Becomes Too Much
 
Bathroom Decoration on a Budget
 
Decorating With Light - Set the Stage for Your Space!
 
Finding Deals On Fabric For Your Sewing Projects
 
Falling Down is a Fear of Many Seniors - It Might Not Need to Be
 
Independent Living Centers -- An Introduction
 
Furniture Slipcovers Can Transform Your Home In An Instant!
 
Christmas Angels: Those Who Touch Our Lives
 
Do You Need an Air Purifier in Your Home?
 
 
 
 

Signs of Pregnancy - The Cry From Below

Of course, there are many different signs of pregnancy and different symptoms that you may or may no ... - Jenny Walsh
 

When Should I Make My Baby Wear Shoes

If you are a new parent one of the questions that may come up early on for you will be, "how soon sh ... - Gregg Hall
 

Decorative Painting

You?ve probably been to houses that have a unique feel to them just because one of the walls in the ... - Elizabeth Morgan
 
 

Greatest Gift

In my fifteenth year, I became the proud owner of my first mini-skirt. Upon seeing it my dad hit the ... - Judy Ringer
 

Book Binding A Lost Art

Book binding can be a rewarding hobby for anyone to undertake and requires only some very basic hand ... - Marcus Harbert
 

Family Tree Charts

Organizing your family tree can be a very challenging and rewarding experience at same time. You nee ... - Max Bellamy
 

Wine Charms for Every Occasion

The list is endless. There are so many wine charms to choose from today. Intricately created, these ... - John Lamont
 

Where Are Business Women Going?

What executive women are doing to have their cake and eat it too. - Roxanne Batson
 
 
Index Page >> Privacy >> Terms of Service
© 2008 www.aquawheel.com All Rights Reserved.