Staghorn Plant Stand

staghorn fern stand drawingA stand for a top-heavy plant

Lisa found a really nice, large staghorn fern, and needed something to support it. Staghorn ferns are mounted on boards, and this one weighs about 30 lbs. It is mounted on a 2′ square board, the plant is about 3′ wide and 4′ high.

I struggled with this design, because the weight of the fern tends to tip it forward. I finally came up staghorn fern stand photowith a design that resembles an artists easel. There is a frame with a ledge for the fern’s board, a diagonal brace for stiffness to the back and long feet extend out in front to keep it from tipping forward.

I worry about wood rotting when it is in direct contact with concrete and water. For this design, I used some trex plastic wood scraps and stainless steel screws to create rot-proof feet that lift the frame off the ground.

I built this before I had a website, and didn’t take any pictures at the time. It is placed under the stair to our staghorn fern stand detail toptwo story deck, and is hard to photograph. I had to get into that area recently, so I tried to take a few pictures in the cramped space. Hopefully, they give you an idea of how it turned out.

Top                      drawings
Second from top  overall picture from the side
Third from top      top of stand and staghorn on board
Fourth from top    long legs to keep from tipping
Fifth from top       detail of brace and trex feet
Bottom                detail of top of frame

staghorn fern stand foot detail
staghorn foot detail close-up

 

staghorn fern stand holder top detail

Happy Mother’s Day!

Our Cat and I get together to sing a song of thanks to Lisa, and to all the women who care for us.

Click on the pages to see full screen.

At the bottom is my first, rough cell phone sketch for this cartoon. The guitar got lost somewhere…

Slab Table

Using up some scraps

We needed to replace a small table in our garden that had developed a noticeable sag. We had a 2″ thick pine slab, left over from a willow bench that had fallen apart. We thought we’d use it for the top of the new table. I made the base out of redwood scraps left over from our trellis.

Top: drawings

Second – fifth: top,side, end

Bottom: table on the back porch