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<div>Originally Posted by <strong>lunarlady</strong> <a href="/community/forum/post/15391756"><img alt="View Post" class="inlineimg" src="/community/img/forum/go_quote.gif" style="border:0px solid;"></a></div>
<div style="font-style:italic;">Another solution is to rig twine from supports. I usually buy the 6' bamboo stakes, then make a tripod on one side of the tomato row, a second tripod on the other, and run a bunch of seisel twine back and forth between the two. Then I just sort of weave the tomato plant into the twine. Does that make sense? Seisel is biodegradable, so at the end of the season I can just hack the whole thing down, leave it to degrade in the garden, and move the stakes into the shed. I do it this way because the regular cages are never tall enough, I'm too cheep to buy the fancy, tall cages, and too lazy to individually stake every plant.</div>
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This is how I do it, too. I love the idea of using biodegradable twine! I had never thought to look for that-- excellent!<br><br>
I've also seen some farmers (I'm thinking of The Barefoot Farmer in TN) who just let the tomatoes do their natural thing and grow along the ground, kind of like squash plants. In our area (hot and humid FL) I would be worried about fungal diseases, but it might be worth trying in cooler areas.