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SkyRiseGrid™ — Grow Twice the Harvest in Half Your Garden Space
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SkyRiseGrid™ — Grow Twice the Harvest in Half Your Garden Space

SkyRiseGrid™ — Grow Twice the Harvest in Half Your Garden Space

Train Your Tomatoes, Cucumbers and Beans to Climb Straight Up with SkyRiseGrid™

Your climbing plants want to grow vertical. They just need something thin enough to grab. SkyRiseGrid™ is the polyethylene mesh net that turns bare frames, bamboo stakes, and back fences into living walls of tomatoes, cucumbers, beans and peas — so you stop losing ground space to sprawl and start picking fruit at eye level.

Product demonstration

Stop Watching Your Cucumbers Rot on the Ground

Tomato cages are too short. Bamboo and twine slip the minute a fruit gets heavy. Last year's vines are still in a tangle in the shed. Plants that flop over hit the dirt, get spotty, and feed slugs before you do. Climbing crops need a net they can actually grip — and you need one that takes minutes to put up, not an afternoon.

➤ Doubles Growing Space Without Adding a Foot of Garden: Train vines up instead of out and a 4×4 patch suddenly holds what used to need 4×8. Same soil, twice the tomatoes, half the sprawl across the lawn.

➤ Holds Heavy Beefsteaks and Long English Cucumbers Without Sagging: Polyethylene strands are thin enough for tendrils to wrap around, strong enough to carry a vine loaded with fruit through a windy August storm.

➤ Ties to Bamboo Stakes, T-Posts or a Back Fence in Minutes: No drilling, no hardware, no special trellis. Stretch the net, zip-tie the corners, push the plants toward it. Done before your coffee gets cold.

Product demonstration

Climbing Plants Want to Go Up. They Just Need Something Thin to Grab.

Cucumbers, peas, pole beans and indeterminate tomatoes all send out tendrils built to wrap around something narrow. Thick wood and metal cages are too fat for them to grip — so the vine flops back down. SkyRiseGrid™'s knotted polyethylene strands are exactly the diameter a tendril is looking for, so the plant grabs on by itself and starts climbing within 24–48 hours.

Each opening in the net is wide enough to reach through with a full adult hand at harvest, so you're not fighting the mesh every time you go to pick a ripe one.

Why Backyard Growers Are Swapping Tomato Cages for This Netting

Gardeners who try SkyRiseGrid™ once tend not to go back. "Way cheaper than a trellis and held my beefsteaks no problem" is the version we hear most often. Beans climb without being trained. Cucumbers stop touching the soil. And the same net comes out of the shed next spring still ready to use — none of the rotting wood, none of the rust.

Pick More Fruit, Lose Less to Rot, Reuse Year After Year

✓ Pull More Out of a Small Backyard or Patio: Vertical growing turns a balcony rail or a 6ft strip along the fence into a real production patch — beans, cukes and tomatoes in places you couldn't plant before.

✓ Keep Fruit Off the Dirt — Fewer Spots, Fewer Slugs: Off-the-ground vines see more sun and more airflow, which means less mildew, fewer rotten cucumbers, and fewer bugs finding lunch.

✓ Roll It Up, Store It, Use It Again Next Spring: Polyethylene doesn't rot in the shed and doesn't rust on the post. Wash off the dirt at the end of the season and it goes right back up in May.

Three Steps from Tangled Box to Living Wall of Vines

Step 1: Measure the run you want to cover and pick the SkyRiseGrid™ length that fits — 6ft for a single tomato row, 16ft for a full pea or cucumber bed.

Step 2: Stretch the net between two bamboo stakes, T-posts, or a back fence. Zip-tie or twine the corners until it sits tight with no sag.

Step 3: Walk a young vine toward the netting once. After that the tendrils take over — by the next morning they've already grabbed on.

SkyRiseGrid™ Wire Tomato Cage Bamboo + Twine
Thin enough for tendrils to grip on their own Too thick ❌ Needs hand-tying ❌
Goes up to 16ft long for full beds 3–5ft only ❌ Limited ✅
UV-treated, reusable next season Rusts ❌ Twine rots ❌

Specifications That Make a Difference

  • Material: Knotted polyethylene strand — won't rust, won't rot in storage
  • Sizes: 6ft, 10ft, 13ft and 16ft lengths to match single rows up to full beds
  • Mesh Options: Thin mesh for peas and light vines, thick mesh for cucumbers, tomatoes and pole beans
  • Weatherproof: UV-resistant — stays put through full sun, summer storms and wind

Your Questions, Answered Before You Buy

Which size and mesh should I pick?

Match the length to the run you're covering — 6ft for one or two tomato plants, 10–16ft for a full pea, bean or cucumber bed. Pick thin mesh for peas and morning glory, thick mesh for anything carrying real fruit weight.

Will it actually hold heavy tomatoes and cucumbers?

Yes — the thick mesh option is built for it. Pair with sturdy stakes or a fence anchor and it'll carry a fruiting vine through the season without sagging.

How do I get it untangled out of the bag?

Tie one short edge to a stake first, then walk the net out by the opposite edge — it opens cleanly instead of bunching. Takes about two minutes once you have one end anchored.

Can my plant tendrils actually grab onto it?

That's the whole reason the strands are thin. Cucumber, pea and pole bean tendrils wrap around it on their own within a day or two. Tomatoes need a one-time hand-up; after that they hold themselves.

Will it last more than one growing season?

Polyethylene doesn't rust, rot or break down in storage. Clean off the soil at the end of the year, roll it up, put it in the shed — it goes back up next spring.

SkyRiseGrid™ — The Vertical Garden Trick That Actually Works

Stop fighting tomato cages that fall over. Stop watching cucumbers rot on the ground. Stretch SkyRiseGrid™ between two stakes, point your plants at it, and let the vines do what they were built to do. By August you'll be picking dinner standing up.

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From $6.00

Original: $19.99

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SkyRiseGrid™ — Grow Twice the Harvest in Half Your Garden Space

$19.99

$6.00

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SkyRiseGrid™ — Grow Twice the Harvest in Half Your Garden Space

Train Your Tomatoes, Cucumbers and Beans to Climb Straight Up with SkyRiseGrid™

Your climbing plants want to grow vertical. They just need something thin enough to grab. SkyRiseGrid™ is the polyethylene mesh net that turns bare frames, bamboo stakes, and back fences into living walls of tomatoes, cucumbers, beans and peas — so you stop losing ground space to sprawl and start picking fruit at eye level.

Product demonstration

Stop Watching Your Cucumbers Rot on the Ground

Tomato cages are too short. Bamboo and twine slip the minute a fruit gets heavy. Last year's vines are still in a tangle in the shed. Plants that flop over hit the dirt, get spotty, and feed slugs before you do. Climbing crops need a net they can actually grip — and you need one that takes minutes to put up, not an afternoon.

➤ Doubles Growing Space Without Adding a Foot of Garden: Train vines up instead of out and a 4×4 patch suddenly holds what used to need 4×8. Same soil, twice the tomatoes, half the sprawl across the lawn.

➤ Holds Heavy Beefsteaks and Long English Cucumbers Without Sagging: Polyethylene strands are thin enough for tendrils to wrap around, strong enough to carry a vine loaded with fruit through a windy August storm.

➤ Ties to Bamboo Stakes, T-Posts or a Back Fence in Minutes: No drilling, no hardware, no special trellis. Stretch the net, zip-tie the corners, push the plants toward it. Done before your coffee gets cold.

Product demonstration

Climbing Plants Want to Go Up. They Just Need Something Thin to Grab.

Cucumbers, peas, pole beans and indeterminate tomatoes all send out tendrils built to wrap around something narrow. Thick wood and metal cages are too fat for them to grip — so the vine flops back down. SkyRiseGrid™'s knotted polyethylene strands are exactly the diameter a tendril is looking for, so the plant grabs on by itself and starts climbing within 24–48 hours.

Each opening in the net is wide enough to reach through with a full adult hand at harvest, so you're not fighting the mesh every time you go to pick a ripe one.

Why Backyard Growers Are Swapping Tomato Cages for This Netting

Gardeners who try SkyRiseGrid™ once tend not to go back. "Way cheaper than a trellis and held my beefsteaks no problem" is the version we hear most often. Beans climb without being trained. Cucumbers stop touching the soil. And the same net comes out of the shed next spring still ready to use — none of the rotting wood, none of the rust.

Pick More Fruit, Lose Less to Rot, Reuse Year After Year

✓ Pull More Out of a Small Backyard or Patio: Vertical growing turns a balcony rail or a 6ft strip along the fence into a real production patch — beans, cukes and tomatoes in places you couldn't plant before.

✓ Keep Fruit Off the Dirt — Fewer Spots, Fewer Slugs: Off-the-ground vines see more sun and more airflow, which means less mildew, fewer rotten cucumbers, and fewer bugs finding lunch.

✓ Roll It Up, Store It, Use It Again Next Spring: Polyethylene doesn't rot in the shed and doesn't rust on the post. Wash off the dirt at the end of the season and it goes right back up in May.

Three Steps from Tangled Box to Living Wall of Vines

Step 1: Measure the run you want to cover and pick the SkyRiseGrid™ length that fits — 6ft for a single tomato row, 16ft for a full pea or cucumber bed.

Step 2: Stretch the net between two bamboo stakes, T-posts, or a back fence. Zip-tie or twine the corners until it sits tight with no sag.

Step 3: Walk a young vine toward the netting once. After that the tendrils take over — by the next morning they've already grabbed on.

SkyRiseGrid™ Wire Tomato Cage Bamboo + Twine
Thin enough for tendrils to grip on their own Too thick ❌ Needs hand-tying ❌
Goes up to 16ft long for full beds 3–5ft only ❌ Limited ✅
UV-treated, reusable next season Rusts ❌ Twine rots ❌

Specifications That Make a Difference

  • Material: Knotted polyethylene strand — won't rust, won't rot in storage
  • Sizes: 6ft, 10ft, 13ft and 16ft lengths to match single rows up to full beds
  • Mesh Options: Thin mesh for peas and light vines, thick mesh for cucumbers, tomatoes and pole beans
  • Weatherproof: UV-resistant — stays put through full sun, summer storms and wind

Your Questions, Answered Before You Buy

Which size and mesh should I pick?

Match the length to the run you're covering — 6ft for one or two tomato plants, 10–16ft for a full pea, bean or cucumber bed. Pick thin mesh for peas and morning glory, thick mesh for anything carrying real fruit weight.

Will it actually hold heavy tomatoes and cucumbers?

Yes — the thick mesh option is built for it. Pair with sturdy stakes or a fence anchor and it'll carry a fruiting vine through the season without sagging.

How do I get it untangled out of the bag?

Tie one short edge to a stake first, then walk the net out by the opposite edge — it opens cleanly instead of bunching. Takes about two minutes once you have one end anchored.

Can my plant tendrils actually grab onto it?

That's the whole reason the strands are thin. Cucumber, pea and pole bean tendrils wrap around it on their own within a day or two. Tomatoes need a one-time hand-up; after that they hold themselves.

Will it last more than one growing season?

Polyethylene doesn't rust, rot or break down in storage. Clean off the soil at the end of the year, roll it up, put it in the shed — it goes back up next spring.

SkyRiseGrid™ — The Vertical Garden Trick That Actually Works

Stop fighting tomato cages that fall over. Stop watching cucumbers rot on the ground. Stretch SkyRiseGrid™ between two stakes, point your plants at it, and let the vines do what they were built to do. By August you'll be picking dinner standing up.

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

Train Your Tomatoes, Cucumbers and Beans to Climb Straight Up with SkyRiseGrid™

Your climbing plants want to grow vertical. They just need something thin enough to grab. SkyRiseGrid™ is the polyethylene mesh net that turns bare frames, bamboo stakes, and back fences into living walls of tomatoes, cucumbers, beans and peas — so you stop losing ground space to sprawl and start picking fruit at eye level.

Product demonstration

Stop Watching Your Cucumbers Rot on the Ground

Tomato cages are too short. Bamboo and twine slip the minute a fruit gets heavy. Last year's vines are still in a tangle in the shed. Plants that flop over hit the dirt, get spotty, and feed slugs before you do. Climbing crops need a net they can actually grip — and you need one that takes minutes to put up, not an afternoon.

➤ Doubles Growing Space Without Adding a Foot of Garden: Train vines up instead of out and a 4×4 patch suddenly holds what used to need 4×8. Same soil, twice the tomatoes, half the sprawl across the lawn.

➤ Holds Heavy Beefsteaks and Long English Cucumbers Without Sagging: Polyethylene strands are thin enough for tendrils to wrap around, strong enough to carry a vine loaded with fruit through a windy August storm.

➤ Ties to Bamboo Stakes, T-Posts or a Back Fence in Minutes: No drilling, no hardware, no special trellis. Stretch the net, zip-tie the corners, push the plants toward it. Done before your coffee gets cold.

Product demonstration

Climbing Plants Want to Go Up. They Just Need Something Thin to Grab.

Cucumbers, peas, pole beans and indeterminate tomatoes all send out tendrils built to wrap around something narrow. Thick wood and metal cages are too fat for them to grip — so the vine flops back down. SkyRiseGrid™'s knotted polyethylene strands are exactly the diameter a tendril is looking for, so the plant grabs on by itself and starts climbing within 24–48 hours.

Each opening in the net is wide enough to reach through with a full adult hand at harvest, so you're not fighting the mesh every time you go to pick a ripe one.

Why Backyard Growers Are Swapping Tomato Cages for This Netting

Gardeners who try SkyRiseGrid™ once tend not to go back. "Way cheaper than a trellis and held my beefsteaks no problem" is the version we hear most often. Beans climb without being trained. Cucumbers stop touching the soil. And the same net comes out of the shed next spring still ready to use — none of the rotting wood, none of the rust.

Pick More Fruit, Lose Less to Rot, Reuse Year After Year

✓ Pull More Out of a Small Backyard or Patio: Vertical growing turns a balcony rail or a 6ft strip along the fence into a real production patch — beans, cukes and tomatoes in places you couldn't plant before.

✓ Keep Fruit Off the Dirt — Fewer Spots, Fewer Slugs: Off-the-ground vines see more sun and more airflow, which means less mildew, fewer rotten cucumbers, and fewer bugs finding lunch.

✓ Roll It Up, Store It, Use It Again Next Spring: Polyethylene doesn't rot in the shed and doesn't rust on the post. Wash off the dirt at the end of the season and it goes right back up in May.

Three Steps from Tangled Box to Living Wall of Vines

Step 1: Measure the run you want to cover and pick the SkyRiseGrid™ length that fits — 6ft for a single tomato row, 16ft for a full pea or cucumber bed.

Step 2: Stretch the net between two bamboo stakes, T-posts, or a back fence. Zip-tie or twine the corners until it sits tight with no sag.

Step 3: Walk a young vine toward the netting once. After that the tendrils take over — by the next morning they've already grabbed on.

SkyRiseGrid™ Wire Tomato Cage Bamboo + Twine
Thin enough for tendrils to grip on their own Too thick ❌ Needs hand-tying ❌
Goes up to 16ft long for full beds 3–5ft only ❌ Limited ✅
UV-treated, reusable next season Rusts ❌ Twine rots ❌

Specifications That Make a Difference

  • Material: Knotted polyethylene strand — won't rust, won't rot in storage
  • Sizes: 6ft, 10ft, 13ft and 16ft lengths to match single rows up to full beds
  • Mesh Options: Thin mesh for peas and light vines, thick mesh for cucumbers, tomatoes and pole beans
  • Weatherproof: UV-resistant — stays put through full sun, summer storms and wind

Your Questions, Answered Before You Buy

Which size and mesh should I pick?

Match the length to the run you're covering — 6ft for one or two tomato plants, 10–16ft for a full pea, bean or cucumber bed. Pick thin mesh for peas and morning glory, thick mesh for anything carrying real fruit weight.

Will it actually hold heavy tomatoes and cucumbers?

Yes — the thick mesh option is built for it. Pair with sturdy stakes or a fence anchor and it'll carry a fruiting vine through the season without sagging.

How do I get it untangled out of the bag?

Tie one short edge to a stake first, then walk the net out by the opposite edge — it opens cleanly instead of bunching. Takes about two minutes once you have one end anchored.

Can my plant tendrils actually grab onto it?

That's the whole reason the strands are thin. Cucumber, pea and pole bean tendrils wrap around it on their own within a day or two. Tomatoes need a one-time hand-up; after that they hold themselves.

Will it last more than one growing season?

Polyethylene doesn't rust, rot or break down in storage. Clean off the soil at the end of the year, roll it up, put it in the shed — it goes back up next spring.

SkyRiseGrid™ — The Vertical Garden Trick That Actually Works

Stop fighting tomato cages that fall over. Stop watching cucumbers rot on the ground. Stretch SkyRiseGrid™ between two stakes, point your plants at it, and let the vines do what they were built to do. By August you'll be picking dinner standing up.