Yes cucumbers will climb a trellis. It promotes good air circulation and the cucumbers will have less rot and a more uniform shape. It will also be easier to harvest.
Yes you can. However, pickling cucumbers have smaller and fewer seeds and a thinner skin than other cucumbers. Therefore, they absorb the pickling solution better and tend to be more crisp than larger cucumbers.
Yes, you can
No. Pickles are cucumbers that have been preserved by pickling
Just like salt, to preserve meat, vinegar does the same to cucumbers.
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Certain varieties of cucumbers have been bred specifically for use in pickling. By using these varieties, the home pickling enthusiast will end up with a crisper and more flavorful result. If growing cucumbers at home, be sure to select seeds that are labeled as "pickling" or "good for pickling" on the seed packet. Good choices for pickling cucumbers include: Pioneer, National Pickling, Saladin, Bush Pickling Liberty Hybrid, Ballerina, Boston Pickling, and Eureka Hybrid.
Making pickled cucumbers aka pickles.
Plant cucumber seeds that specifically say they are pickling cucumbers. Then pick the small ones for Gherkin (small, whole, sweet) pickles. The recipe on the pickling lime package is a real good one.
English ivy will climb just about anything, and you can also buy a trellis from the store or build one.
I think you are looking for the word "trellis" or "trelissing"
during the pickling process, things shrink, which also causes the warts
Roses do not have tendrils to climb walls or other items like vines do. Roses have to be tied to a trellis in order for them to climb.