Interested in growing Dragon Fruit at home? Here are instructions for building a short, easier to maintain trellis. The instructions are for a 4 foot post, but you can use a 3 foot or 3.5 foot post if needed. The Tuff Block option will add minimal height off the edge of the pot, keeping the top of your frame lower to the ground.
The Dragon Fruit Trellis, end to end
A complete 25-gallon container trellis build — from anchoring the post in the pot, through the square frame and crossbar, to training the canopy that will fruit on it
Why GRK RSS over polymer deck screws?
Engineered for structural connections — rated for shear and withdrawal loads. T-25 star drive won’t strip like Phillips. Self-tapping serrated threads need minimal pre-drilling. Coated for outdoor exposure. About $1 per screw but worth it for a connection that holds 50+ lbs of fruit-laden canopy.
Designed for deck boards attaching to joists, not structural framing connections. More likely to snap under shear load. Phillips heads strip easily under torque. Coating degrades over years of UV and rain. Fine for the deck boards, wrong tool for this job.
The finished trellis
How the post, frame, and mature dragon fruit canopy come together
The main stem grows straight up the post, secured with figure-eight ties every 6–8 inches. Once it reaches the crossbar, you top it — and the lateral branches drape over all four sides of the square frame. Fruit forms on the mature drooping branches as they cascade. The canopy weight flows straight down the center bar onto the post — the strongest load path possible.
If laterals are within ~6–12 inches below the crossbar: tie them loosely to the post and train them up to the crossbar before letting them drape over. Dragon fruit climbs willingly with support. Once over the crossbar, treat as normal primaries. Canopy ends up at full crossbar height. This is the cleaner approach.
If laterals are more than ~12 inches below the crossbar: let them drape directly outward from where they emerged. The canopy on that side starts lower than the crossbar — not a structural problem, just a less uniform aesthetic. The lateral will still fruit fine.
Mix-and-match works: use 2–3 of the most vigorous lower laterals trained up to the crossbar plus any new laterals that push from areoles at or above the crossbar. Aim for 4–6 primaries total. Once the canopy fills in, you can’t tell which ones originated below.
What not to do: don’t try to grow a new vertical leader from one of the low laterals to “reach” the crossbar — the plant has committed to lateral production and the resulting stem will be weak and kinked. And don’t remove the early laterals hoping higher ones will form — areoles closer to the topping cut are the ones most likely to push, lower ones usually stay dormant.