Staking your plants is important for vegetables and flowers alike. Sometimes 
large showy flowers like dahlias, asters or peonies can become quite 
top-heavy
after a rain, so staking is a simple technique to keep them from sagging. 
Tall and delicately stemmed plants often require some support - especially 
during
foul weather. And staking your vegetable plants is an effective way to 
ensure a bountiful harvest. The following article demonstrates what to use 
and how
to stake a variety of garden plants for the optimum health and overall 
beauty of your landscape.

Stakes are often forsaken at the expense of the flowers. Traditionally 
thought to be intrusive and unattractive, stakes should be neither if they 
are used
properly. Carefully staked plants will show no visible support because the 
healthy and attractive foliage will hide the stakes or various strings and 
wires.
And staked plants are far more appealing than their unstaked counterparts 
who cannot hold their pretty flowerheads up to please anyone.

The best way to stake is to begin early in the growing season so you can 
easily train your plant and its subsequent foliage to cover its support 
system.
Staking mature plants whose foliage is flopping is a far more difficult 
task, and the leaves and flowers are not as appealing as if the plant were 
trained
from the start. Generally speaking, a stake should be planted about six 
inches shorter than your plant is likely to be at maturity. The stalk of the 
flower
should be tied to the stake firmly, but with some give to allow for winds or 
gusty breezes. Twine makes for an adequate tie, but strips of fabric may 
also
be used.

If your garden boasts clumps of flowers in need of support, a stake system 
can be accomplished by supporting the clump rather than each individual 
plant.
Place stakes around the clump, then circle and criss-cross through the 
center with your twine. For an unobtrusive look, use twigs as stakes and 
fishing
line as your ties.

Bamboo stakes are quite common and can be purchased as thin as a pencil or 
up to a half inch in thickness depending on how much support the plant 
requires.
Round or square wire cages are sometimes needed for staking plants like 
peonies and tomatoes. In the case of the cages, these plants do not even 
need to
be tied; the plant will grow through the wire and find its own support. 
These must be installed while the plant is quite young to be most effective. 
Wire
rings may also be purchased at local garden centers for similar purpose.

Other plants like climbers and vines may thrive as ground cover, but will 
grow to create a wonderful dimension of height in your garden. Usually any 
type
of support structure will do given the plant can grow through and around it. 
Trellises are the most commonly used support structures, but you can be 
creative
and use a flea market find - even a section of lattice fencing or stretch of 
chicken wire. Whatever you stake, you are likely to be adding to the look
and longevity of the plant in question making for a most appealing garden 
filled with healthful looking plants. 

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