I am back for 10 minutes. Now that you will build the antenna vertically it will be tall. You should not have metal wires going through your antenna. Below the bottom element metal wires are OK. (10 feet below) I have fiberglass rods with eye holes on each end. From ground to a point below the bottom element is wire, then I change to fiberglass so the RF is not in the wire support. The top of the support wires needs to be non conductive. Because your pole is not strong you need many wires. Rope stretches too much. My antenna say how much pressure a 100mile/hour wind pushes per element. With some math you can see how strong the supports must be.
I made a big mistake many years ago. The antenna tower is on top of a 7 story building. The wires, cables, are strong and I used good cable clamps, 3 on each place. I used eye hooks every where. At the roof of the building I used "J" hooks. One day in a very strong wind I went up to see how things are. The wind pushed the tower to one side so much that the down wind cable has no tension. The cable came off the J hook because there was no tension. I connected back the cable and added some wire to keep the cable in place. About 10 minutes the wind reversed direction. I saved the tower. The next day we replaced the J hooks with eye screws.
I hope never to be on top of a seven story building in a 80 m/h wind again.