Home owners spend countless hours and a considerable amount of time and money every year on landscaping with the expectation of having blooming plants, healthy shrubs, and trees with fruits and vegetables. Their expectations are shattered when bulbs are dug out by wild animals and young plants, leaves, shoots, buds, and flowers are eaten or destroyed by deer and other wild animals.
Recently there has been the development of chemical and organic sprays to deter deer and other wild animals from plants. However, this method of protection is rather expensive and in-effective due to rain washing away the liquid after it is sprayed. It also creates an odor, and is harmful to the environment, insects, and microbes living in the soil.
Another method of protection used in recent years is to convert large heavy fifty foot rolls of wire or plastic mesh into plant enclosures. The drawback to this method is home owners having to transport large rolls and hire professionals to construct the enclosures. Mesh enclosures tend to corrode over time, look hideous in the winter, and are difficult to insert and remove when the plant branches out.
Plastic deer netting, chicken wire mesh, and welded mesh are attached to plastic rods, wood or flat iron fencing post to fence off animals from plants. This method also requires transport of materials and hired labor.
Electric fences are another expensive way of protecting plants. However, home owners prefer not to use this method due to high cost of installation and danger to small animals and children.
In addition to growing plants and trees directly on soil, most gardeners also grow plants and bulbs in containers placed on wooden decks and brick patios. Because it is not possible to attach wire or plastic mesh cylinders onto brick patios, concrete floors, or wooden decks, plants on such surfaces are not protected from animals.
Plants grown on sloped or uneven terrain cannot be protected with typical round plastic mesh or wire cylinders because the top edge of the cylinder restricts the tree top because it is placed at a slant. Further, because the device is placed on a slope it is easily toppled or blown away by strong winds. Also a plant protection device placed around a tree on a slope is not aesthetically pleasing to the eye because the top edge of the cylinder is not perpendicular to the trunk of the tree.
One of the biggest problems associated with using existing wire or plastic cylindrical devises available in the market is its inability to be modified to accommodate the needs of a growing plant. In addition, when placing or removing a pre-constructed wire cylinder from a tree that has branched out, the flowers and branches are damaged in the process.
With the advent of the internet, a majority of consumers prefer ordering home and garden products on-line or picking them up at one-stop big box garden centers. Even though online garden catalog companies and retailers offer rolled mesh, various types of fencing posts, and all the accessories required to construct protection devices for plants, I have not yet found a compact, versatile, ready to assemble, modular system with all the necessary components in one carton that can be shipped or picked up.
The invention of the MODULAR VERSITLE PLANT PROTECTION SYSTEM is a protective coverings for plants and a tree trunk guard for plant husbandry as in Classification 47/32.4, 47/29.5 and a fencing or enclosure and adjustable structure for agriculture as defined in International Classification A01G13, E04H17.
The preferred embodiment in the present invention is a modular, expandable, and versatile system constructed with interchangeable parts to provide protection for bulbs and trees from deer and other wild animals. In the preferred embodiment, a frame constructed with vertical poles and circles, is enclosed with a flexible piece of mesh or netting.
Vertical poles comprise of one starter pole and one or more support poles. Starter pole and support poles comprise of a top section and a bottom section connected by a ferrule. The term vertical pole(s) will be used hereafter to refer to a top section and a bottom section connected by a ferrule. Starter and support poles may be constructed with round low carbon steel, wrought iron, fiberglass, plastic, or any other suitable materials and be finished with a coating for durability.
The two circles are open-ended and can be closed or opened by a ferrule at the end of the circles. Circles may be constructed with the same materials as the vertical poles or alternatively with spring steel which can be coiled into a smaller diameter circle to occupy less storage space. Circles may be constructed with the same size diameters as the vertical poles or of a smaller diameter for easy coiling and to provide a spring like effect to keep the end from slipping out of the ferrule.
The said frame is assembled by guiding the rod end of each circle through the eyelets on the support poles and closing the circles by pushing in the open-end of the circle into the ferule. The assembled frame is firmly secured to the ground and tightly wrapped with a rectangle piece flexible mesh or netting preferably made of UV treated synthetic or natural materials.
Flexible mesh or netting is firmly attached to the said frame by means of several specially designed hooks on the top and bottom sections of the starter pole. It is further secured with several wire or plastic ties, binding the mesh or netting to the said frame in several additional places along the two circles and vertical poles.
The materials and methods described above are the most suitable for the construction of the Modular system, but it should not be interpreted as the only materials suitable to construct the system.
The modular system in the preferred embodiment is designed to build an enclosure around a tree or be constructed away from the tree and be placed over a tree on penetrable surface. The constructed system is secured to the penetrable surface by exerting pressure on the several horizontal rods protruding from the end of the vertical poles.
In another embodiment of the invention, the preferred embodiment is modified by attaching a different style of bottom sections to the same top sections to protect plants and bulbs grown in containers placed on non-penetrable hard surfaces such as brick, concrete, or wooden decks.
In another embodiment of the invention, the preferred embodiment is modified by attaching different sizes of the top section to the same bottom sections to accommodate tall trees. It should be noted that the system is designed to accommodate more than one size of top sections and is not limited to one size. Since the modular system is designed to accept interchangeable parts it is possible for the same embodiment to have a different style of bottom sections, making it possible for the system to be used on penetrable or hard surfaces.
In another embodiment of the invention, the preferred embodiment is modified by attaching circles of different diameters to the vertical poles to expand the system to accommodate wider trees. It should be noted that the system is designed to accommodate more than one diameter of circles and not just limited to one diameter of circles. Since the modular system is designed to accept interchangeable parts it possible for the same embodiment to have different types of bottom sections making it possible to use the embodiment on penetrable soil and on hard surfaces.
In another embodiment of the invention, the preferred embodiment is modified to accommodate plants grown on slopes or uneven terrain by adjusting the angle of the circles to be parallel to the surface of the soil. For this embodiment, the said frame is enclosed with an alternative mesh or netting with slits cut at the bottom edge. The divisions created by the slits at the bottom edge of the mesh or netting can be arranged along the slope of the terrain so the circles and top edge of mesh or netting will be in a horizontal plane. Flexibility of the circles to freely move from a horizontal position to any other required position makes it possible for the system to be constructed on sloped or on uneven terrains.
The main object of my invention is to provide the do-it-your-self consumers a versatile plant enclosure system that is light weight, easy to modify, and be constructed without tools or hired labor. In addition, there are several other advantages to the invention as described below:
A modular system with interchangeable components allows the same system to be expanded to accommodate taller and wider trees.
A modular system with interchangeable components also allows customer to modify the system to be used on different surfaces such as penetrable and hard surfaces.
A modular system designed with light weight sectional support poles, circles, and flexible mesh or netting, allows all the required components of the system to be packaged in a carton which cost less to ship, easy to transport, and occupies less retail and storage space making it a more desirable product for big box retailers, catalog companies, and internet retailers.
Flexible joints in the frame and the use of mesh or netting with slits at the bottom edge allows the system to be installed on sloped or uneven terrains.
A modular design gives the consumer the choice of constructing the enclosure around a tall grown tree or inserting a fully constructed system over a tree. It can also be dismantled piece by piece without breaking the branches or damaging the tree.
A modular design give the consumers the choice of ordering replacement and system modification parts such as top extensions, bottom sections (L shaped or tapered end), wider circles, and alternative style of mesh or netting making the system adaptable, re-usable and repairable.
In prior art work examined (U.S. Pat. No. 9,351,449B2 Williams, U.S. Pat. No. 3,816,959, Nalle U.S. Pat. No. 2,753,662, Behnke, U.S. Pat. No. 5,930,948, Daniel, U.S. Pat. No. 2,996,842 Weston, U.S. Pat. No. 951,807 Erdely, U.S. Pat. No. 1,552,445 Peres, U.S. Pat. No. 2,009,867 Ball, U.S. Pat. No. 4,858,380 Gayle), the plant protection systems are not modular, therefore not expandable to accommodate the growth of the plant (height, width) or be modified to suit different surfaces(soil, bricks, slanted terrain) Further, they are not designed with connectable components or flexible mesh or netting, making the total system compact, light weight, and small enough to fits in a box for commercialization and easy shipping. Therefore there is a need for a new modular, versatile plant protection system.
A front view of the invention fully assembled on penetrable soil is shown in
Ferrule 6 in
Circles 5 are connected to vertical poles by means of eyelet 8. Eyelets are welded 19 as shown in
As shown in
The open-ended pair of circles 5 in
The modular plant protection system can be assembled around the plant 29 if the plant is tall and wide or the system can be constructed away from the plant and be placed over the plant if the plant is not too tall. The instructions given below are for assembling the preferred embodiment around a tall branched out plant 29.
Connect the top sections 1, 3 shown in
To attach the mesh or netting illustrated in
After the mesh is fitted on to the frame, the top end 23 of the mesh or netting will be a few inches taller than the upper circle 5. The mesh or netting bottom edge 26 extends vertically below the bottom circle 5 touching the planting surface 27 to prevent small animals from crawling beneath the plant protection system.
Now that the assembly is complete, to prevent the mesh cylinder from sliding down or moving around the frame, use ties 18 in
In another embodiment of the invention is shown in
In another embodiment of the invention, the preferred embodiment is modified by attaching different sizes of top sections (not shown in drawings) to extend the height of the system. The method of attaching the circles to the support poles and attaching the mesh or netting to the frame is the same as described for the preferred embodiment. It should be noted that, since the system is modular where interchangeable components can be used, the same circles and bottom sections used in the preferred embodiment can be used in this embodiment.
In another embodiment of the invention, the preferred embodiment is modified by attaching a different size of circles (not shown in drawings) to the system to accommodate wider trees. The method of attaching the circles to the support poles and attaching the mesh or netting to the frame is the same as described for the preferred embodiment. It should be noted that, since the system is modular where interchangeable components can be used, the same top and bottom sections used with the preferred embodiment can be used in this embodiment.
In another embodiment of the invention, the preferred embodiment is modified for the modular plant protection system to be placed on a slope or uneven surface as shown in
Number | Date | Country | |
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62469891 | Mar 2017 | US |