That would be best. I have tomato cages made from field fence, 4’ high. I fasten them to the ground with 4’ high pieces of 1/2” rebar with about 4” bent to an L.Best tomato support I've ever used is a heavy duty metal cage shaped like a cone. I've made round cages out of field fence, but they don't nest together for storage in the winter like the cone shaped ones.
Hasn't been our experience after a few years they start giving splinters when handling without gloves.We use the sunguard 3/8 smooth fiberglass post for rotational grazing from TSC.
Sometimes they get hit and brake off the bottom 5" or so.
I cut them off and sharpen them on a belt sander and handle them without worry of splinters on the top section. We use these in the garden to mark rows and tie up plants all the time.
If the ground is soft and I have my carhartt on I just use my shoulder against the top while gripping and shoving down with bare hands to put them in the ground.
Otherwise we only use a rubber mallet to put them in the ground if its hard or frozen. Some of them have to be over a dozen years old now. Use a metal hammer one time and you will always be getting splinters.
Do you use a hammer or rubber mallet?Hasn't been our experience after a few years they start giving splinters when handling without gloves.
This is what I made for fiberglass driveway markers. It is a 42" by half inch pipe with a 48" by 3/8" steel rod that slides into the pipe. One end of the pipe is welded closed so it can hammer the metal rod into the ground, making a hole in hard/rocky ground for the 48" reflective marker to fit into.Do you use a hammer or rubber mallet?
I have been contemplating making a 3/8 diameter rod with a side hammer on the top section 6” above the waist.This is what I made for fiberglass driveway markers. It is a 42" by half inch pipe with a 48" by 3/8" steel rod that slides into the pipe. One end of the pipe is welded closed so it can hammer the metal rod into the ground, making a hole in hard/rocky ground for the 48" reflective marker to fit into.
With soft ground the 3/8" steel rod is not needed.
Maybe something like this would work for fiberglass garden stakes and cause less stress-splinters on the stakes.
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We push them in after making a pilot hole with a piece of rebar, the ground is too hard most of the time to drive them in.Do you use a hammer or rubber mallet?
If you can contain it.Years ago I planted a small stand of bamboo that I could contain by mowing around it. Bamboo makes great garden stakes and tomato cages.