Planting Sweet Peas // DIY Free Trellis

Planting sweet peas is easy. In this organic gardening video, I will show you how to plant sweet peas and make a free trellis teepee.
MENTIONED VIDEOS
Sowing Sweet Pea Seeds: https://youtu.be/HuHarhnX3k8?t=414

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Root Trainer: https://amzn.to/3Mn4vUf
Neptunes Harvest Products (with discount): https://www.nextlevelgardening.tv/products-i-love
Sarah Raven Book: A Year Full of Flowers: https://amzn.to/41bTUzs
Power Planter Garden Auger: https://amzn.to/3KDE2jT

OTHER PRODUCTS I USE AND LOVE: https://www.nextlevelgardening.tv/products-i-love
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Hey Guys, I’m Brian from Next Level Gardening

Welcome to our online community! A place to be educated, inspired and hopefully entertained at the same time! A place where you can learn to grow your own food and become a better organic gardener. At the same time, a place to grow the beauty around you and stretch that imagination (that sometimes lies dormant, deep inside) through gardening.

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27 Replies to “Planting Sweet Peas // DIY Free Trellis”

  1. I have a tee pee steel trellis around about 3.2 m tall it’s great last for years , l grow my tomatoes ???? on the trellis and my French beans.

  2. Love the trellis! I used runners from a Mexican Honeysuckle a few years back to make hoops for my row cover. After about a month half of my hoops started to bud with new leaves. I didn't think about the runners being the plant's way of reaching out for new places to take root. I still have a half dozen of the hoops I continue to use. I used the same to make a trellis at the top of an arrangement of t-posts, and they have held up extremely well.

  3. So amazing you can just use what you have on hand. I can't wait to see them in bloom! Thanks for sharing!

  4. I love this idea! It’s perfect! Thank you for sharing as you’re so inspiring. Happy gardening!

  5. Love the quote " the magic is in the details". I very much agree and appreciate you showing us these beautiful little detailed magical builds so we can add them to our own gardens. I too perfer the natural look and to use what's on hand. It looks great and I can't wait to see it covered in blooming sweet peas! Thanks again for all you do, Brian!

  6. Love the trellis idea! I'd like to try that for peas and pole beans too! Lovely!!! Learned a lot and now I want sweet peas too! My Granny's bank behind her house used to be covered with thema nd I loved them. Good memories. This space is going to be beautiful! 🙂

  7. Your trellis turned out so great, perfect scale too for that space. I like to direct sow sweet peas but like you said the weather does not always allow us to do what we want or need.

  8. You are too sweet. I know you planted sweet peas for Miss Emily. I remembered you said they were her favorite. Do those eucalyptus trees smell like the eucalyptus in the floral stores?

  9. The trellis turned out great! I have been eyeing my privet hedges that have self sown in different areas of the yard. I was going to snip off all the branches along the trunks, but I think I'll use your idea as much as is feasible. I love sweet peas. They're so fragrant and dainty.

  10. This is so cool! Thank you! When I saw you not strip branches, I thought wait, what’s going on? The end result is sooo cottage, love it. I’m also intrigued by the root trainers, I’ve always heard sweet peas are not fond of being transplants. I want to try them, as sweet peas tend to be all or nothing for me. However, they are my favorite flower in the garden. The smell is heaven. I’ve always wanted to do a tepee, but don’t have the space. Will just have to live through yours!

  11. Really hope you provide update videos on how it looks when the flowers are in bloom. Looking forward to seeing that. And thank you for sharing

  12. Beautiful! I love how you used the copiced (spelling?) trees for this project. I have something like that but it is thorny huisache treelets or suckers that came up after I had to remove the big tree (fell over in an ice storm because it leaned too much). I let the suckers grow last summer because they provided needed shade to a couple pots of flowers that wilted every day in the hot Texas sun! I keep them trimmed down a bit but they could be used as trellis material when I trim them. Just have to cut off thorns! Or I could just buy some bamboo poles! ????

  13. That trellis is beautiful and perfect for the cottage garden. Can't wait to see it covered in sweet pea blooms

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