DIY Garden Trellis

Extend your garden space by growing up. It’s easy to make more space in your garden with this simple DIY garden trellis. This is a sturdy trellis that hold up very well. They work great for cucumbers, beans, peas, and even heavier items too.

Make Your Own Garden Trellis

Extend Your Garden Space

Our garden space is just a little limited since we don’t have a huge area to garden in. But I try to extend my growing area by growing vertically.

I like to grow pole peas and beans along with cucumbers on a trellis. By growing them vertically, I can save on the amount of garden space needed to grow them.

Over the years I have tried a few different kinds of trellis. We had a PVC pipe frame we would attach to the garden beds and then string up netting to grow our vegetables on.

There were a few problems with this kind of trellis for us. The netting never lasted more than a year. I had to repurchase netting each year and attach it again with cable ties. The growing space was a little limited also.

Cutting the cattle panel for the diy garden trellis

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Some people like to use teepee poles to grow the beans on or even sunflowers. I’ve never given either one of these options a try in the past, but they might work. I think the space available to grow upward would be limited on both of these options.

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The trellis option we have liked best is this cattle panel trellis.

What’s a Cattle Panel?…

A cattle panel is a large wire, square grid of fencing. I think they must normally be used for fencing but I’m not really sure. They do work wonderfully for a trellis though.

The cattle panels we found were about 5 feet wide by about 12 feet long. We found them at a local farm and ranch store.

How to Make a Cattle Panel Trellis

Making your own cattle panel trellis is quite simple you only need a couple of items and a couple of tools.

1. Trim Your Panels to fit (if needed)

The trellis is easy to make once you get the cattle panels home. Since our garden beds are 4 feet wide we trimmed off a foot on one side of the panel. We used bolt cutters to cut them. We purchased a 24-inch pair of bolt cutters and they worked great not only on this project but many others too.

2. Cut Your Panel in Half

Then we measured halfway lengthwise and cut the panel in half. When cutting be sure to cut at the end of one of the square rows, leaving one side cut flush and the other side with the metal rods sticking out.

You will want the extra metal wire sticking past the end to poke into the ground.

How to make DIY garden trellis

Now you should have two panels. One panel with a flush, smooth end, and the other end, will have a pointy end to stick into the soil. The second panel should be flush at both ends.

3. Cutting the Second Panel

The second panel with be flush at both ends. We need to cut one end of the horizontal wires off so it will match the first panel.

Now you have two panels the same size. One end that is flush, the other ends with spikes sticking out. See the photo above in case I’m not explaining this well. 🙂

Installing the hog rings on garden trellis

4. Attaching the Two Panels

Once you have two matching panels, you’ll need to attach them together at the top, this is the smooth edge.

We used hog rings to do this part. But cable ties would work too. The hog rings last longer because they are metal. Even though our hog rings are rusted they are still holding after 5 years.

To add the hog rings, just crimp them around the top two bars and squeeze them shut. This makes a hinge at the top of the panels. See photo above.

Easy DIY Garden Trellis

5. Using Your Trellis

To set up your trellis, insert the spike end into the ground straddling the plants you want to grow upright and push into the soil. The plants can grow right up the trellis.

Because the trellis are metal there won’t be any sagging net to take care of. And because the square are pretty large you can reach through to pick too.

In the winter, these cattle panel trellis will fold flat for easy storage. We hang ours on the back of our gazebo out of sight on three large hooks. They could be hung on the side of a garage or in a shed for winter storage.

That’s all there is to making a cattle panel trellis. If you have any questions leave them below in the comments. I’ll do my best to answer them.

Looking for more gardening ideas? Head on over to the gardening page for more gardening ideas and inspiration. 

Or Check Out These Other Gardening Helps,

How to Plant Tomatoes, Trenching them In
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Printable and Editable Garden Journal

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72 thoughts on “DIY Garden Trellis”

  1. OMG – I have been searching for an easy trellis to build! I have recently removed some invasive ivy from my fences and have built garden boxes there instead. I want to grow pole beans, but I don’t want them to grow up my fence and cause further damage – these trellises are a perfect solution!

  2. Bill Volckening

    Wow, I can tell you are a prolific gardener. Swoon! I wish I had time to do more gardening, but alas, the weeds are still there and it’s way too hot to pull them today! 🙂

        1. Karen, we get pretty good winds here. Last year we had 30mph winds while the panels were full of vines but they held up great. I think it’s because so much of the ends of the panel is in the ground and it’s like an A frame that helps to make it sturdy. I hope that helps.

    1. Tshanina, I grow cucumbers, pole beans, and pole peas each year on them. I have in the past, but not this year grown small pumpkins too. It really helps to conserve on space.

  3. Those look great! We use these panels for our grapes, but we’ve never welded them together. That’s a great idea.
    Blessings,

    1. We have been using these for about 3 years now and they have held up really nicely. They work great for our peas, beans, and cucumbers. I like that when our garden isn’t being used, in the winter, we can take them and fold them up so they don’t use as much storage space.

      1. Well…I think I may be a little too lazy to clean them up in the winter 🙂 . But I think that’s why your garden always looks so beautiful. Lots of love there, it shows!

        1. My best pumpkin harvest was the year I planted next to a chain link fence; ever seen a pumpkin try to grow halfway through a link?!! That’s what I hated about nylon nets and hardware ‘cloth’: untangling the vines after harvest but cattle panels should be open enough.

          1. Oh my, I’ve never seen a pumpkin grow half way through a link. The cattle panels are really nice for picking off of and for cleaning up at the end of the season. I’ve tried nets before but I hated the clean up at the end of the season. One year I got so frustrated trying to get the dead plants off I just cut the net and threw it away.

          2. A weed torch makes short work of the clean up process in fall on the cattle panels of course.

          3. Thanks for sharing Troy. We have a weed torch I’ll have to give it a try. I usually just pull them off by hand.

  4. Wow! I just found you folks on Pinterest! We have a backyard I am converting to raised beds for veggies and herbs. I loved the cattle panels for tomatoes !!! I never had much luck with the cheapie “tomato cages” for sale everywhere. They look sturdy enough for several kinds of plants. Very, very clever! Thanks so much! Be well and prosper! 🙂

    1. Tamara, I’ve already started my peas, broccoli and lettuce in the garden. Usually if the weather isn’t too wet I try to start about mid February. But some years I have to wait until March. This year has been unusually warm for us.

  5. Excellent idea! Looks sturdy- have you used this type of trellis for indeterminant vining tomatoes? Do you think it will hold the weight? Thank you!!

    1. Sara, they are really quite sturdy. I haven’t tried indeterminant vining tomatoes on them before. But last year my beans grew and grew and got so thick and heavy on the frame and I didn’t have any problems. I would think they would hold the weight just fine. I think if you grow on both sides of the frame that should help distribute the weight evenly over the frame. I usually grow beans, peas and cucumbers on them. One year I did grow small pumpkins on them too.

  6. How do they hold up to the weather (ie: strong winds, storms, etc)? Do you use anything else as support, or are they just held in the ground by the end wires of the panel?

    1. Jess, I haven’t had any trouble with them during storms. We have wind here fairly regularly, and I haven’t had any trouble at all with these. To hold them in the ground I just stick the end wires of the panel all the way into the dirt. They stay in ground firmly.

  7. Jennifer Bostwick

    D0 you think these could handle the weight of cantaloupe, watermelon, and spaghetti squash?

    1. Jennifer, I haven’t tried growing watermelon, cantaloupe or spaghetti squash on them before. I have grown pie pumpkins and they did alright but they those pumpkins don’t get huge. I would think spaghetti squash would work, but I’m not sure about the melons. The trellis is pretty sturdy and if you train the plants so the weight is even on both sides it might work. Sorry I don’t have a better answer for you.

  8. I am going to put in a new vegetable garden this year and am planning to make a 8×4 raised bed …. I am struggling how to grow my variety of vegetables … I want to do tomatoes cucumbers beans and peppers all which I understand climb so how would I plant and trellis everything in the same bed? Would love help email is probably the easiest way… thank you

    1. Melissa, I would use a trellis for the beans, if you plan on growing the pole variety. They produce all season long, where the bush beans which don’t need a trellis produce one or two good harvests and then they are done. I would set your trellis up along the side of the raised bed, so that it doesn’t block the sun on the rest of the garden. I have a south facing garden area. So I plant the items I grow on a trellis on the north end of the raised bed so it only shades the grass and it doesn’t shade the rest of the garden.

      Tomatoes can be grown in cages or even supported by bamboo stick and then tied to the stick. If you don’t have room for a second trellis or the second trellis would shade the garden too much, I would look for a bush cucumber variety. I grow both vine and bush varieties of cucumbers. The bush variety can be grown in a smaller area and won’t need a trellis, it grows more like a zucchini plant.

      Peppers can be grown without any support. If they get a little tall or they start to lean in our garden, I will add a bamboo stick to support them and use string to tie them to it.

      I hope this helps. Let me know if you have any more questions.

      ~Shelly

  9. Can you tell me if all hog or cattle panel comes rolled up? Is there a way to get it not rolled up? It seems hard to work with when it is rolled.

    1. Nicci,

      The cattle panels that I used for this project were heavy gauge wire cattle panel fencing that is purchased in a flat sheet. I purchased mine at Costal Farm and Ranch. I don’t think the rolled fencing would work for this project as the gauge of wire used in that fencing isn’t heavy enough to stand up. Let me know if you have any more questions.

    2. We are so happy to have found this solution for growing our cucumbers vertically.
      We bought the cattle panels at Tractor Supply. They come in flat panels, either 8 feet or 16 feet long and are 4 gauge, very heavy. We had to use a large bolt cutter to cut them.

  10. How close do you plant your plants, using this technique? I did what you did, and used cattle panels. Now I can’t decided on how close to plant the zucchini, cucumber and yellow squash.
    Thanks!
    Shanna

    1. Shanna,

      I usually will plant three hills of cucumbers along a 4-foot wide cattle panel trellis. I think with the squash I might just put two hills along a 4-foot wide trellis, but you might be able to squeeze in three. I hope this helps! ~Shelly

    1. Happy Gardener, We purchased them at our local farm and ranch store for around $20 a panel. Each panel makes one trellis stand. ~Shelly

  11. I KNEW there had to be an easier way to trellis my cucumbers, peas, and pole beans – thank you so much for sharing this! I just installed some lovely redwood raised beds in my smallish Silicon Valley yard and wanted to be able to grow upwards. The wooden trellises they sell at garden centers look nice, but they just don’t look sturdy enough to last, and netting (ugh!), just a big pain in the rear. This year I am going to try using cattle panels in several spots. Do you think it would work to put them in the ground near the base of a fence and then run a wire or cord from the top of the fence to the top of the panel that allowed the panel to lean away from the fence? (Does that make sense?). I’m thinking it would make harvesting super easy.

    1. Kate, I think that would work as long as the wire or cord is strong enough to hold the panel and the weight of the fruit. If you try it let me know how it works out. Happy Gardening!

      1. Well, the results are in – cattle panels are amazing!

        The Mexican Gherkins didn’t put any weight strain in the angled panels, and cucumbers, pole beans, and peas are still going strong. The structure, sunlight and air flow provided by the panels makes a huge difference!

        Thank you so much for the inspiration!

  12. wondering about summer zucchini squash? Do you plant them on each side of the trelis or down the middle ? I’m all ready to plant but I’m not sure which way to go ? Also , do u still plant them on a mound ? Thank you for your help

    1. Annette, I plant them down the middle of the trellis and use mounds. I do that because our garden gets sun from one side. If you have a nice sunny spot that gets more sun, you could plant them on either side of the trellis and spread them out along the trellis. It should work well either way.

  13. I made these and am so happy. I’m just tickled pink. Thank you!!!! (p.s. I panicked when I realized I didn’t have a tool to cut the cattle panels but thankfully my country neighbor helped me out). Have a great growing season!!

  14. So glad I found this pin. I got my panels today and looking forward to my son making the trellis. Thank you for sharing.

    1. Deidre, Your welcome. I hope the trellis work as well for you as they do at our house. We’ve been using them for years now. We use the trellis for cucumbers, beans, and sugar snap peas each year. They hold up well from year to year too.

  15. I’m so excited about this I feel like a kid in a toy store. I going to try them on my purple hull peas and I may plant some watermelons now that I can keep them off the ground.

    1. Let me know how the watermelons do. I’ve never tried to grow them since we don’t usually have a long enough season to ripen them. But one of these days I might try a variety that will do better in our area and see if I can grow a few. I hope your garden does great this year!

  16. I have used a cattle panel, divided & attached at the top for cucumbers in the past. I am wondering if the A frame configuration would work for indeterminate tomatoes. Has anyone tried this?

  17. The thing I like about these is that the metal looks heavy duty and robust. My mom used to use bamboo poles tied together with twine – those lasted only one season and then they rotted. These look like you could use them for several years.

    1. James, we also hated that our trellis would only last one season. But these cattle panel trellis just finished the 4 season and are holding up wonderfully. They are also easy to remove for storage in the winter since they fold flat. We hang them on the backside of our gazebo for the winter so we don’t have to look at them.

      1. I use mine stock panels year round. In summer, I use them for melons and cucumbers. In winter, I use them for peas. They can also provide windbreak support for when I hear of a bad storm coming.

  18. Hi Shelly
    The cattle panels will hold up with cantaluope, watermelon an some squash but you need to make a sling to hold the melons or they break the vines a you lose your plants i’ve grown them for 10 years that way

  19. I love this idea for a trellis! I’m going to make one for a clematis vine I have! Thanks for giving us the plans to make this!

      1. Jessica, I’m sure they would be fine to use if they aren’t too rusty. Mine has a little rust here and there and they still work great. I hope that helps.

  20. Do you think I could make a free standing trellis 16 feet tall? Would two cattle panels hinged together be sturdy enough to stand upright? I would like to grow honeysuckle on the sunny side of my house. My old house gets so hot in the summer… I would like to give it some shade. I am afraid to attach a trellis to the house because I don’t want the vines to cause any damage, so I want to place a free standing trellis just a few feet from the side of the house.

  21. Do not buy the rolled wire…go to Tractor Supply or a “real” farming feed store…they will be able to give you the correct information and or suggestions… These trellises using cattle wire are great! Thank you Shelly!

  22. I am giving gardening a go this year, first time ever. I did a mini version of this for some cherry tomatoes and peas. I didn’t join the tops as I don’t think it would be good for the tomato’s. I hope the peas do just as well with a open top cage 🙂

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