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Gardening

Best plant cages for home gardens: Tomato cages and beyond

A plant cage can help with growing vegetables and flowers in a backyard garden, experts explained.
June 24, 2021, 5:36 PM EDT
Ambar Pardilla

Ambar Pardilla

Young boy and girl with Corgi dog picking home grown tomatoes. See the best plant cages and best tomato cages for growing vegetables and flowers from roses to cucumbers in your home garden, according to experts.
Should you get a plant cage for your backyard garden? Here’s what experts have to say. Cavan Images / Getty Images

Panacea Products 89723 Pack of 10 Tomato and Plant Support Cage

While Witz recommended a plant cage from Gardener’s Blue Ribbon, it’s only available for in-store pick-up. This top-rated cage from Amazon is similar in shape and is made from galvanized wire. It reaches 33 inches in height for smaller vegetables and flowers. Since it comes in a pack of 10, the cage might be more useful for those with bigger gardens. These cages have earned an average 4.1-star rating over more than 1,193 reviews.

Panacea Products 89723 Pack of 10 Tomato and Plant Support Cage

Panacea Products 89723 Pack of 10 Tomato and Plant Support Cage

Gardener’s Supply Company Set of 4 Heavy Duty Tomato Cages

These powder-coated steel cages are designed to support plants on all sides without the need for tying them up. Each cage also features 8-inch square openings to help with harvesting. Once the season is over, the hinged panels can be folded flat, according to the brand. You can also find a taller version of these cages, which come in a set of two, on Amazon.

Gardener's Supply Company Set of 4 Heavy Duty Tomato Cages

Gardener’s Supply Company Set of 4 Heavy Duty Tomato Cages

Growneer 3-Pack Assembled Plant Cages

For home gardeners with plans for more plants in their gardens, this pack of three garden cages could be helpful. The cages can be assembled with the included stakes made from steel with a plastic coating and snap-on arms to secure the stakes, along with clips and twist ties to attach to other trellises in your garden. You can adjust the stakes to reach a maximum height of 51 inches. It boasts an average 4.2-star rating over more than 800 reviews.

Growneer 3-Pack Assembled Plant Cages

Growneer 3-Pack Assembled Plant Cages

Glamos 5-pack Heavy Duty Tomato Cage

If you’re searching for a couple of cages, consider this pack of five. It’s available in two sizes, 14 inches by 42 inches or 16 inches by 54 inches. Each is designed to offer heavy duty support, made from a galvanized steel wire that’s been painted with a powder coating. It’s also meant for plants and vines that are 10 pounds in size. The cages currently come in four colors: Emerald Green, Green, Light Green and Red.

Glamos 5-pack Heavy Duty Tomato Cage

Glamos 5-pack Heavy Duty Tomato Cage

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Other plant support structures for gardens

Plant cages are a particular type of support structure that may or may not be right for your garden, depending on what you’re growing. “Besides providing support, plant cages can be used as focal points in garden design,” Bishop said. “Depending on the style of your garden, you can pick a different support structure and incorporate it in your landscape. Bigger structures can also play a double role and provide shade or separate the garden in different sections.

The following are a few of the most common garden support structures you’ll see and what they’re intended to do, according to Bishop.

Obelisks: These are similar to cages in offering a vertical focal point to a garden and can “provide perfect support” for plants like sweet peas and Morning glories as well.

Arches: Both big and small gardens can benefit from arches, which candivide different sections of your backyard. This support is usually reserved for roses but other climbing plants can also be used.

Trellises: Among the most common type of support structure for vegetable and flower gardens alike, a trellis can be free-standing, mounted to a wall or create a flower screen. You can grow Black-eyed Susans, passion flowers and trumpet vines on them.

Stakes: Another easy to use option, these are usually for plants featuring only one stem including peas, tomatoes and cucumbers.

Pergolas: These have a “double function,” offering both support and shade for vines, wisteria and other woody climbing plants. A pergola “won’t give in under the weight of the plant.”

What plants you should get a cage for

When searching for a plant cage, you’ll often see them marketed mainly towards tomatoes. That’s because gardeners usually use them for plants that produce heavy fruits (yes, technically, a tomato is a fruit), Witz said. But other plants can also benefit from some support. The following are among the most common plants a cage could be used with, according to the experts that we talked to.

Flowers: Peonies, wisteria, Morning glories and roses

Fruits and vegetables: Berry bushes, cucumbers, peas and beans

As for what plants don’t need a plant cage, heaving vining plants like melons and squash will be too big (you can leave them on a large trellis or on the ground) while peppers, bush beans and leafy greens don’t need any additional support at all, according to Witz.

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How to install plant cages in your garden

You should use a cage when plants in your garden are young or when you first start planting seeds, experts explained. “My best tip is to go ahead and place your cage even if you think you don’t need to yet,” Witz said. “Plants sometimes grow faster than you anticipate, and attempting to fit a cage around a larger plant can be difficult or impossible. This is definitely a case of better safe than sorry”

Otherwise, installing a plant cage is fairly straightforward, according to experts.

Place your cage around seedlings that are about 4 to 5 inches tall — you can also do this once you finish planting or very soon after, Witz advised.

Center the cage around your plant — if it features stakes, push them down to the ground as far as they go, Witz added.

Guide the branches through the cage as the plant grows, Smith said. For larger cages, you can also add stakes around them for more support and stability, he mentioned. Stakes can help prevent a more mature plant from blowing over in strong winds, Tanner told us.

“Plant cages are used to conserve space, so if you have minimal space for your garden, you should definitely try installing them,” Smith mentioned. Tanner agreed: “Growing the plants vertically uses much less square footage than allowing them to sprawl on the ground.”

Do plant cages protect from insects, including cicadas?

By now, you’ve probably heard — literally — about the billions of cicadas emerging from the ground after almost two decades away (they’re partaking in a month-long mating ritual). While these cicadas are pesky, they aren’t pests — in fact, the three experts we spoke to said that they’re more of an annoyance than an actual danger.

“These periodical cicadas do not pose a risk to humans or pets. They are only interested in singing (to attract mates), mating and laying eggs,” explained J.C. Chong, a professor and entomology extension specialist at Clemson University. “Once all females have laid eggs, they all die. Their loud songs may be an annoyance for some, but it’s a great conversation starter for others.” If you’re wondering where all the noise comes from, it’s because male cicadas sing and female cicadas respond to these songs by making a clicking sound with their wings, mentioned Kathy Glassey, director of renewable services at Monster Tree Service.

For home gardeners, these cicadas aren’t really a cause for concern — they don’t eat away garden vegetables but they sometimes lay eggs in the branches of young saplings (trees) and small scrubs, explained University of Maryland entomologist Michael J. Raupp. Raupp suggested wrapping young trees in cicada netting but said it’s “already too late to do this in much of the range where cicadas are emerging.” If you’re noticing cicadas throughout your backyard, Chong recommended reveling in the “spectacle.” “No management is needed at all for the typical dog-day cicadas.”

Plant cages aren’t meant to protect crops from insects, either. “Plant cages can help protect plants from certain animals like deer, cats, dogs and some birds. However, you can’t avoid insects with plant cages,” Bishop said. “There are other structures like plant tents and netting that can protect from insects and pests, but they don’t offer support for plants to grow.” Likewise, a plant cloche, which is generally made from glass and shaped like a bell, is meant to provide protection against pests, birds and frost, according to Smith. You can DIY one using old plastic bottles, he added.

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Ambar Pardilla

Ambar Pardilla was a former reporter for Select on NBC News. 

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