Boost your garden's productivity with our top 28 pea trellis ideas! From DIY to ready-made designs, discover creative and practical ways to support your pea plants for optimal growth.
If you are planning on growing peas this year, then you will need a way to support them and allow them to climb. There are lots of options available, but which will be best for you?
Growing peas vertically is easy, and a great space saver. Learn how to trellis peas, get tips for training the vines, and support ideas too.
The green vegetable peas are a good source of potassium, fibers, magnesium, vitamin A, C, and B 6 and iron. There are many ways to…
Growing climbing beans and peas on a trellis is a great way to maximise your garden's growing space, while providing habitat and shade that further helps
Want to build a garden trellis that's cheap and easy? These DIY trellis ideas for the garden are quick to make and don't cost much.
How to build trellises for peas - do you also have such question? I will be constructing pea trellis this week from materials having at hand...
See how to plant and grow a bumper crop of delicious sugar snap peas - in your garden, raised beds, or even in containers!
These little ones of mine do love their forts. And in the garden, their very most favourite thing to eat is the snap peas. So I thought that combining the two was just the thing to do! Sounds simple enough, except for the fact that my forts generally fall down quickly. And except for the
Here are 8 helpful ideas on how to incorporate the cottage concept in your garden, no matter how big or small.
Complete instructions for growing Siberian irises. Tips for breeding and transplanting Siberian irises. Disease and Pest Control
If Arthur Parkinson (the 23-year-old mastermind behind the gorgeous garden at English potter Emma Bridgewater's vast Stoke-on-Trent headquarters) has a hol
The current craze for sweet peas might have started because of my blog, at least so I have been told, but the truth is,...
Browse our pick of the best climbing plants. From flowering climbing plants to the best rambling plants to attract wildlife, there's something for every garden.
Thirty years ago, after spending many years travelling, Louise and Nigel Johnson set up the Burford Garden Company in the premises of Nigel’s family’s garden nursery. Uninspired by the bland, identikit garden centres that were selling mass produced, industrial goods and fluorescent coloured bedding plants, they wanted to create a very individual and inspirational centre for...
Quality mix of cool colours A hardy annual, formula mix combining quality 'Spencer' types in dusky twilight shades. Large fragrant flowers on vigorous climbing plants to cover trellis, fencing and other supports, ideal for cutting. Sweet Peas - Probably the nation's favourite! These beautifully scented blooms make dwarf hedging or can climb up trellis and are super cut flowers. We know the sweet pea has a special place amongst our gardeners' affections and we're delighted to offer a huge range of varieties to you. Nothing can beat the sweet pea for all round performance - garden decoration and wonderful fragrance in the garden and the vase! Height: 180cm(6ft) Plant Class: Hardy Annual (HA). Habit: Climbing. 25 seeds Sowing & Growing Information: Sow indoors for surest results, January-March or September-October, 1.5cm (?") deep, 5 seeds per 12cm (5") pot of compost. Water well and place in a cold frame, greenhouse or cool windowsill. A temperature of 15?C (60?F) is ideal. Keep moist. Seedlings usually appear in 12-21 days. Pinch out the growing tip, when two pairs of leaves have formed, to encourage bushy growth. Gradually accustom young plants to outside conditions (avoid frosts), before planting out into well-drained soil, March-May, 30cm (12") apart. Support with tall canes or netting. Or, sow outdoors for ease, April-May, where they are to flower, 1.5cm (?") deep, directly into finely-prepared, well-drained soil, which has already been watered. Sow 2 seeds together, every 30cm (12"). Remove weaker seedling, which can then be transplanted. Seeds sown in autumn generally flower earlier the following year. Flowers: May to October. Pick blooms regularly to prolong the flowering season.
How to grow snow peas in your backyard garden. You'll love growing and eating these sweet and tasty peas after a long winter. An early garden treat!