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Help! Cages conflict with trellises


Square Foot Gardening List - http://www.flinet.com/~gallus/sqft.html

OK, folks-

We went whole hog.  Eight squares of double-dug raised beds.  Cinder block
borders.  Half a ton of sand, peat, manure, etc.  Cut down half a dozen
trees to let in more light.  Carefully optimized companion planting.  Now,
I'm stuck, and I need help from you square foot veterans out there.

Here's the problem.  Nearly all our squares have some climber on the back
row, so we are putting in trellises. 

We also have a healthy crop of rabbits in the neighborhood, so we're going
to need critter barriers.

I built a 4'x4' square wooden frame and erected a 4'x4'x2' high cage of
2"x2" wire fencing onto it.  It sits nicely on my garden squares, and with a
little plastic sheeting and Mel B's trademark clothespins, makes a mini
greenhouse.

BUT, it can't stay there, because as soon as the tomatoes and such start to
climb they will need to be out of the cage and up the trellis.  If I leave
the cage open on the trellis end, the rabbits can get in. 

SO, what do I do now?  

Cage only the first 3x4 feet and leave the back row open?  Then the frame
sits on blocks on three sides and hovers over the dirt on the fourth.  Any
enterprising bunny could crawl under that for some nice lettuce.

Build some sort of mesh back to the trellis that interlocks with the cage?
Sounds complicated!

The good news is that I haven't built the climbing frames yet, so the design
is still flexible.

Clue me in here, guys.  What do you do when you need a critter cage AND a
climbing frame?

-BT


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