Overhead trellis
Vertical trellis
T trellis
Photos taken at Brian Westwood’s property at Mutchilba with thanks
A Frame trellis (library image)
Growing vines on trellis
- Passionfruit grow on a vine structure and are highly adept climbers – commercial orchards use a trellis system
- The most common trellis system in use in Australia is vertical fence-style trellis with large stay posts at either end of a row and wooden posts strung with steel wire at the top level
- The young plants are planted in line with the posts equidistant and trained up a wire or string to reach the top wire
- Once a plant reaches the top wire, two opposing leaders are trained along the wire to provide the vine with support as it grows and begins to bear fruit
- Alternative growing systems in use are overhead trellis, T-trellis and A-frames
- Each growing system has pro’s and con’s
PRO | CON | |
---|---|---|
OVERHEAD | + Higher yield + Better protection from sun damage | – More training required – Poor spray penetration in year 2 canopy – Fruit loss where fruit develops on top of the canopy |
VERTICAL | + Cheapest & quickest to install + Good spray penetration + Less training required | – Poor protection from sun damage – Lower yield vs. overhead |
T TRELLIS | + Good spray penetration + Increased canopy = increased yield | – More expensive to install – Some fruit loss from fruit developing on top of T canopy area – Less vine training required |
A FRAME | + Increased canopy = increased yield + Good spray penetration | – More expensive to install – Medium training required |
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