Vines

I cannot imagine a garden without vines, in our garden, nearly every tree has a vine, some have more than one, we scramble them through shrubs and even build the occasional trellis, although I much prefer the natural look. They are also great as ground covers. If a tree they are growing on falls just peel off the vine, it will hide the stump and make a great ground cover. Most vines want shade or at least to have their roots in the shade, although they may not flower until they climb up into the sunlight of the upper canopy. Some are programmed not to flower until they are no longer touching anything. If you think about it, evolving the ability to climb sort of implies something to climb on. Sun loving vines tend to have fewer climbing adaptations. Vines are also a royal pain in the grass from a nurseryman’s perspective they grow into one another and into nearby plants, and whenever someone wants to buy one it takes forever to disentangle it.



Product Image Item Name Price+
Hedera colchica 'Batami'

Hedera colchica 'Batami'

Colchicine indeed, King Kong could swing from this one. With monstrous nearly foot long leaves it's hardly recognizable as an ivy; it has tetraploid vigor and then some. A named selection that Hinkley got from Roy Lancaster, this has been in two of the finest private gardens in the world. I wish I knew how they find time to trek around and maintain a garden, we go nowhere, and still have little time for our private gardens.
$19.00

Add:

Hedera helix 'Hedgehog'

Hedera helix 'Hedgehog'

Congested growth of curly heavily ruffled and twisted leaves, an attractive dwarf cultivar from Baldassare.
$19.00

Add:

Hedera helix ‘Glacier’

Hedera helix ‘Glacier’

I don't know how we got on the topic of Ivies but I mentioned to Punnett that I had rather given up on Ivies because all the nice variegated ones turned out to be tender here. They were for him as well with one exception, the name is a trifle questionable; it has been in his garden for a long time, shortly after that talk, it appeared in our greenhouse. Sure enough, it is a very nice variegated form.
$19.00

Add:

Hedera helix Curley

Hedera helix Curley

Jacques brought us this, when asked about the name he said it came from Punnett and to ask him, he can’t remember either, nameless and cold hardy with ruffled leaves.
$19.00

Add:

Humulus lupulus aureus

Humulus lupulus aureus

I wanted this mostly as a food plant for Angle-Wing butterflies, a must for butterfly gardeners or those who like fast growing vines; no chance of the caterpillars devouring this one.
$19.00

Add:

Lonicera japonica aureoreticulata

Lonicera japonica aureoreticulata

Climbing bush with outstanding foliage and a golden net like pattern on each leaf, the biology of which is quite interesting, check it out.
$19.00

Add:

Lonicera periclymenum 'Sweet Sue'

Lonicera periclymenum 'Sweet Sue'

Collected by Roy Lancaster not in China but on a Swedish beach, and named for his wife, it’s much like the previous but a more vigorous plant; the lack of variegation is responsible, Sweet Sue is also considerably more floriferous than Harlequin.
$19.00

Add:

Lonicera x tellmanniana

Lonicera x tellmanniana

A outstanding hybrid between sempervirens ‘Superba’ and tragophylla which was produced in Budapest in 1920, with extremely showy heads of bright orange flowers and attractive foliage, noticeably larger than periclymenum, Dirr considers it the showiest of all the climbing honeysuckles. Terminal clusters of up to a dozen long tubed flowers, the slender tubes and nearly 2’ long and flare to an inch wide when they open. Color is an almost fluorescent orangish yellow tipped red in the bud stage and opening more yellow.
$19.00

Add:

Pandorea jasminoides

Pandorea jasminoides

One of the showiest vines we grow, sadly it is tender here. We have a specimen growing up through a large potted variegated Daphne odora, the huge flat faced pink trumpets are produced all summer, and everyone wants the trumpet flowered Daphne. Related to Campsis, tuberous rooted, plant deep and grow as a dieback a little further south.
$19.00

Add:

Parthenocissus quinquifolia 'Variegata'

Parthenocissus quinquifolia 'Variegata'

The variegated version of our native Virginia Creeper, a plant I would have expected to be a rampant weed has proved quite the contrary. Dick put one out and it promptly croaked, and ours has struggled for years to get big enough to produce a few cuttings, on the other hand the variegation is stunning, in any event we only have a few.
$19.00

Add:



Your IP Address is: 38.107.179.241
Copyright © 2012 Arrowhead Alpines. Powered by Zen Cart
©2012 ZenCart SEO by Inveo s.r.o.