This quick video takes a look at what I consider to be the very best tomato cages out there. They definitely require a bit of an investment, but they work fantastically and you will be able to use them year after year. #homegrown #vegetablegarden #tomatoes

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4 Comments

  1. The beautiful tomatoes in my garden have to be planted next to the house in order to be eaten because it has rained too much.😊

  2. I have had those a couple years now and like them very much. Except when breaking them down for storage and round sections always need force to fit.

  3. I use those cheap weak tomato cages and they have always served me well for the last ten years. I started with the cheap dollar store cages and a 8' bamboo stick and than moved up to the cheap Canadian Tire tomato cages. They should last me another ten years possibly more. My only complaint is they don't make them tall enough. They stack well for storage, they don't rust, they don't pop apart and they are cheap as they don't cost 20$ or more per cage, in which not many people have to spend on a tomato cage here in Canada. I don't know about people in the US but most here don't. Cheap as in a product is the wrong word to use when people are growing vegetables at home so they can save money and can't afford to buy expensive stuff. Using a stick and tying the tomato plant to it is also a good support and cheap. I just prefer not to buy over priced stuff I am going to have to use duct tape or tiewraps to keep it together after a year of use and spend hours taking apart for easy storage where as twenty of my cheap steel cages can all stack together and take up 2'x2' of space in my garage. The word cheap is an insult to many that can't afford the expensive kind. Which in most cases is the cheap kind and I mean cheap as in garbage kind.

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