See: Monty Don reveals his top birdhouse ideas and expert tips Writing on his website (opens in new tab), Monty Don says that checking and putting in plant supports Is one of his priorities in February. ‘This is not a glamorous job but an important one,’ writes Don.  ‘‘Go round your garden checking all supports, wires, ties and structures that will be carrying climbing plants this year. Any that are damaged or a bit ropey should be repaired or replaced now before they need to be used and before new growth begins that might be damaged by such repair work or even your heavy footwork in a border.’ It’s not just climbing plants that benefit from sturdy plant supports. In a video for BBC’s Gardener’s World, Don admits that he became fed up with buying more and more plant supports for his own garden, Longmeadow in Herefordshire.  Adding that he isn’t a fan of bamboo canes and twine to support flowering plants in borders. Instead he came up with the idea for his own homemade plant supports, made from steel rods. And even though he uses them all over his garden, there’s a good reason why you’ve probably never spotted them. ‘You put them in and they disappear into the foliage very quickly,’ he explains. All you need to make them, are 6mm steel rods, which Don says are readily available from steel stockholders. ‘It sounds a bit obscure,’ says Don, ‘but if you look them up you’ll be surprised at how many there are.’ Steel rods are used in the building trade for reinforcing concrete. To use them as plant supports for your garden you’ll need a 6mm diameter steel rod, measuring at least 2.5m long. Each one makes one plant support, so buy as many lengths as you think you’ll need – they are not expensive. A photo posted by on Once you’ve got your steel rods, you can make your own plant supports in three easy steps, as Monty Don explains in his video (opens in new tab) .

How to make plant supports like Monty Don’s

  1. Bend the steel rod round a tree or other large handy object to shape it into a curved hoop with two straight legs. The thin 6mm rods are easy to bend by hand. 
  2. Next position your hoop shape between two solid planks of wood – short pieces of scaffolding boards are ideal for this. Leave the long straight legs visible. 
  3. Finally, bend up the straight ends of the rod to make the legs of the plant support.

How to support garden plants with Monty’s steel rod plant support

Simply push the legs of the plant support into the ground, in front of the plant you wish to support. Make sure you position it where it will support the stems of your prize blooms. ‘They last forever, are easy to store, they won’t break, you put them in and they disappear into the foliage very quickly,’ says Monty Don. ‘You can raise them up a bit as the plant grows, you can make them to any size or shape you want, they’re completely customizable and using them is the easiest thing in the world.’

How to support perennials with Monty’s plant support tip

Monty Don’s steel rod plant supports are ideal for use with taller herbaceous perennials with full, heavy flowers. These are the ones we look forward to each year, the frothy peonies, the large oriental poppies. They also work well with shrub roses.  And the steel rod plant supports are perfect to prop up the wafting, waving stems of perennials like salvia x sylvestris and Verbena bonariensis, and biennial plants like Campanula medium (Canterbury bells). These are all perfect candidates for Monty Don’s homemade plant supports.

More plant support ideas from Monty Don

If you watch Gardeners’ World or follow Monty Don on Instagram, you’re sure to have noticed another of his clever DIY plant support ideas. When he’s pruning or copicing the trees around Longmeadow, he saves the longer pruned branches to use later in the season to support his taller climbers - everything from sweet peas, to clematis and runner beans.  A photo posted by on It’s a classic tripod or wigwam support, binding three or more long branches together at the top with garden twine and then simply pushing them into the soil wherever they’re needed. They’re sustainable, natural, and work equally well in a flower garden or vegetable garden. If you don’t have many trees or a ready supply of pruned branches, you can buy ready cut runner bean poles, made from branches, from most garden centers. Simply bind them together with garden twine to get the full Monty effect.  For more of Monty’s tips, follow him on Twitter @TheMontyDon (opens in new tab)