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+
Parthenocissus tricuspidata 'Variegata'

Parthenocissus tricuspidata 'Variegata'

This may in reality be the cultivar veitchii, which is a blotched variegate, according to Dirr there is some discrepancy as to whether or not the true veitchii is in cultivation in the U.S.; however if the descriptions are correct this would seem to be identical. Whatever the name it is an outstanding small leaved irregularly variegated and blotched form giving a pink purple white green multicolor display especially in spring.
$19.00

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Passiflora 'Coral Glow'

Passiflora 'Coral Glow'

A fantastic looking plant with coral pink flowers that tolerates temperatures down to freezing and actually flowers better in cool weather the cross is complex; P. manicata? x ((P. mixtax P. tripartita v mollissima) x (P. mixta x P. tripartita v molissima))
$19.00

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Passiflora caerulea

Passiflora caerulea

Hardy Passionflower, this will eat your greenhouse and spread Kudzu fashion to the surrounding acreage, and attract Heliconiad butterflies from miles around, we have had Gulf Fritillaries on ours a thousand miles north of their native range.
$19.00

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Trachelospermum jasminoides 'Tricolor'

Trachelospermum jasminoides 'Tricolor'

Outstanding tricolor foliage we are always a sucker for green pink and cream, and we are not alone. An award of merit winner in the UK, this lovely vine is actually a member of the dogbane family; the fragrance of the flowers is a nearly overpowering jasmine scent. The only shortcoming for us is its hardiness, it came rated zone 7 but Punnett thinks that a bit overly optimistic and he may be right the damn thing sure looks tropical.
$19.00

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Trichosanthes kirilowii v. japonica

Trichosanthes kirilowii v. japonica

Much like T. cucumeroides but bigger if that is possible, reaching 50-60', cool enough but there is more, the huge tendriled white flowers make passionflowers pale by comparison; they look like something out of a science fiction movie, be sure to check under the bed for pods, the snake gourd fruits that follow are yellow, and may contain alien clones.
$19.00

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Aristolochia macrophylla (durior)

Aristolochia macrophylla (durior)

A classic Appalachian native vine for shading porches, we have it on a big silver maple and it is reaching for the canopy. It is quite a sight when in flower and even better when you can look up and see dozens of Pipevine caterpillars clinging to the underside of the leaves, true they prefer A. clematis but macrophylla has the advantage of extra biomass, eliminating the defoliation problem. Our colony of Philenor now seems permanent.
$24.00

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Aristolochia manschuriensis HC 970157

Aristolochia manschuriensis HC 970157

A relict wood liana collected by hinkley it is spectacular in flower but difficult to root, dick stuck cuttings for years with little to show for it. last year we finally figured it out (or got lucky) and rooted a fair number. your local pipevine swallowtails will thank us
$24.00

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Campsis radicans flava

Campsis radicans flava

We never seem to have much of this, (Dick is not a big fan of campsis so it goes to the bottom of the cut list), but I like it for its yellow flowers and am still mad that a brain dead former employee ripped my stock plant out of the display garden.
$24.00

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Campsis x tagliabuana 'Madam Galen'

Campsis x tagliabuana 'Madam Galen'

A very large flowered hybrid, C. radicans x C. grandiflora, the rich apricot flowers can flare to 8cm wide, nearly twice that of radicans.
$24.00

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Celastrus scandens

Celastrus scandens

This came to us as scandens from a North Carolina source so it probably is the native one, however I did not look at it closely when it was in fruit, if I’m wrong and you hate it you can always cut it down and make some great rustic furniture.
$24.00

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