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You are here: Home / Gardening Tips / General / DIY Raspberry Trellis

DIY Raspberry Trellis

Updated : June 17, 2024

11 Comments

Raspberries will grow happily without any support at all, but having a raspberry trellis /support system makes gardening easier for you!  raspberry trellis 1If left to their own devices, raspberries will form an arching plant about 7 to 9 feet tall.

Making a support keeps these plants neat and tidy, enables easy walking between rows, and makes harvesting convenient.

This raspberry trellis is simple and easy, no carpentry needed!

Materials you’ll need for your DIY Raspberry Trellis:

6 foot tall stakes or posts, Wire(10 or 12 gauge galvanized wire works well), Mallet, Old carpet or cardboard

Step 1- Outline your raspberry patch

Start by outlining the confines of your raspberry beds. Mine are 3′ x 12′.

Three feet depth gives you the ability to reach into the center of the patch from either side, not missing any juicy treasures!

If your raspberries are growing along a fence or wall, keep the depth of your bed at 18″ so you can reach in to harvest easily.

Lay down strips of old carpet, wood, or even cardboard boxes around the bed you have outlined, creating a border and barrier so your new raspberry shoots will come up in your patch, not in your path.

trellis carpet trellis carpet 2I use wide pieces of old carpet between the rows in my raspberry patch and it prevents weed growth and directs new raspberry shoots to come up in the bed.

 Step 2- Put in support stakes or poles

trellis carpetNow that you have outlined your patch with some kind of barrier border, use a mallet to drive a stake into the soil at each of the 4 corners of your bed until it is about a foot into the ground.
Firm the ground around the stakes.  If your bed is longer than 6 feet, you’ll need a support stake half-way between corner stakes on the long side of your beds.
You can use metal fence stakes, rot-resistant fence poles, old closet dowels, or anything you have on hand.
Metal fence stakes worked well for me, and they have little notches to help hold the wire in place.

 Step 3- Wrap wire around the stakes

raspberry trellis 3You’ll need 2 wire supports, horizontal to the ground at about 18″ from the ground and also up near the top of the stakes.
Start with the corner stake, with the wire measuring approximately 18″ up from the ground,  and wrap the wire around the stake a few times.
Stretch the wire to the next stake, repeating the process until you have outlined your bed and returned to the original stake.
Repeat with another wire near the top of the stakes.

 Step 4- Tuck those raspberries into bed

trellis tuckTuck your raspberry canes all inside your wire outlined bed.

Step 5- Prune back your canes

raspberry trellis 4Prune your raspberry canes off at about 6 feet. Using your corner support stakes as an approximate height guide, prune back all the plants.  You’ll need to do this a few times during the growing season to keep them easy to manage.

Step 6- Maintenance

trellis tuckTuck all new green growth that has sprung up from the ground in the spring back behind the wire supports as they grow.  The wires serve as a cage to keep the plants confined within the raspberry patch.
They grow very fast, so regularly tucking them behind the wires will keep them tidy.
There is no need to tie up the canes.  Once the canes hit the 6 foot mark, off with their heads.  You’ll have a very manageable, fruitful raspberry patch!

About the Author-Diane H.

I love to garden!  For me, it is miraculous to see plants grow, nourishing and therapeutic to work in the garden, and health-building to eat your own homegrown foods. Fresh raspberries from the garden can’t be beat! I am not a fan of backbreaking work, though, so the easy way in gardening always has appeal to me.  My husband and I are the parents of 7 children whom I home schooled. We live on 7 acres in the Rocky Mountains, with a short growing season.

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Comments

  1. Andrew Saal says

    June 2, 2020 at 2:16 pm

    Have you ever considered a trellis system that actually spreads the plant out to allow better sun penetration and air flow. Check out ibexgrows.com. They have been used on commercial farms for years and are now availabe to home growers.

    Reply
  2. Path Soong says

    November 7, 2019 at 10:40 am

    Your instructions are very helpful. Simple.
    How much space between the rows do you suggest ?
    Thank you

    Reply
  3. Dianne South says

    September 19, 2018 at 7:25 pm

    How many plants need to be in a 12′ by 3′ raspberry bed? Also, how far should they be spaced out? I love to make homemade jam and jelly, so I can never have too much fruit.

    Reply
    • Mike says

      September 20, 2018 at 8:43 am

      Dianne,

      I’d say no more than four, maybe three.

      Reply
    • Ben McLellan says

      April 25, 2021 at 9:53 am

      18 inches apart

      Reply
  4. abbie says

    April 26, 2018 at 4:27 pm

    You should tie each individual primal cane (before it leafs out) to the top trellis wire. It will look like the letter V when you are looking DOWN the length of your hedgerow. This V pattern allows for better airflow and sunlight which reduces disease problems, increases fruit and makes it easier to harvest. Also, don’t be afraid to make a 2- 3′ wide bed with your planting if you want more canes to produce more fruit. The 1′ wide path won’t give you nearly as much fruit but then again you won’t have to weed as much. So, if you want more fruit, be ready to weed more.

    Reply
  5. Suzanne C says

    July 24, 2017 at 11:52 am

    Question if you keep pruning them, when do you stop so they can flower and fruit?

    Reply
    • abbie says

      April 26, 2018 at 4:22 pm

      You only need to cut out the ones that are outside of the perimeter you set. Let the ones inside the trellis system flower and fruit.

      Reply
  6. Pam says

    April 12, 2016 at 9:32 pm

    I presently have my berries by a fence but am not really happy with it although they are happy. I am thinking of putting them in a new spot and using my old clothesline posts as the main support of the trellis. Can you see a problem with that?

    Reply
    • Mike says

      April 13, 2016 at 6:43 pm

      Pam,

      No, I don’t see an issue with that at all.

      Reply
  7. Annette Allyn Aguilar-Gomez says

    June 26, 2015 at 2:25 pm

    Am struggling with red raspberries, because my nana had them. Great information on setting up the bed.

    Reply

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