Love ur channel. Always clear, informative, and to the point. No loud crazy music, teasers, exaggerations, or dragging out with unnecessary fluff n stuff. New subscriber.
A word to the wise: if you grow cat's claw you WILL need to cut it back to the ground periodically, it's extremely vigorous and will grow over itself leaving a ton of dead mass between the new growth and the surface it's climbing on. If i were to grow it i would cut it all back down to the ground every 3 years or so for maitenance (gives you lots of material for compost)
I moved to AZ 1 1/2 yrs ago from Ill. I had no idea that there were so many flowering plants that do well out in the desert! Thank you for showing me that I can have a garden again both flowers & vegetables. I LOVE your channel! Thank you!
@Marlablum5534 I just bought the most beautifully fragrant Arabian Jasmine that I’d like to grow on the east side of my home by our bedroom windows. I’m in 9b So Cal, inland where we have hardly any moisture so very dry heat. It would receive all the direct early day sun, do you think it will handle it without too much scorching? I’m hoping to espalier it on my stucco, so I know it’ll have the heat of the house in the winter which I think it’ll love.
My favorite hot weather vine is the flaming glory bower vine…it blooms from December to January in the brightest red I have ever seen .The beautiful dark green leaves are a great background to the bright red clusters of this beauty.
THANK YOU❤️‼️ I lost all my trees/house in the Paradise Ca Camp Fire & am starting from scratch. Our weather is similar to yours & getting hotter every year. Your info is priceless.
@@120toes Caterpillars won’t kill passion vine. Please grow a native vine or one that you’re certain is not invasive. Also, some non-native varieties are actually poisonous to the caterpillars, which the egg laying butterfly doesn’t know.
Thanks for your list of plants. I live in a 10a zone in Western Australia. We have brutal summers here with possibly one of the worst heatwaves I've experienced over this last summer (temps at 110° for a whole week). Whatever survived remained and what didn't got thrown out. 😂
I live in a area that gets these temps also. Cape honeysuckle does well and holds up along with the roses. Other vines to mention are Wisteria, morning glories, Passionfruit, and bougainvillea!
A beautiful way to display parthenocissus is to have mesh screen be the infill of your metal frame that sits mounted away from the house wall. It can be installed independent of the wall as well. The adhesive pads cling and allow the plant to be perfectly flat to the surface, and the leaves lay as shingles. I have positioned a tall one just off a west facing widow. From inside the house I am able to watch the chameleons come and go seeking the shade. It is pretty from both sides, and offers a unique perspective.
Thank you! I was just thinking today how I wanted a vine to cover our ugly brick walls! Living in suburbs of Phoenix, I'm always worried the sun will just fry whatever I put up.
I am here in Houston and lately the summers have been crazy hot! I have most of the vines you are talking about but also have a few others for you to try that do well in our Texas heat. Mascagnia Butterfly Vine, Coral Honeysuckle, Peggy Martin Climbing Rose, Rangoon Creeper, Mexican Flame Vine, Summer Wisteria, Snail Vine. I have just found your videos and love them. ❤ Thank you!
Yeah, my vote is for Mexican Flame Vine. They have changed the genus like three times now, but it has beautiful red/orange flowers (think iceplant, only bigger), grows fast to 15 feet plus, loves a lot of heat, uses little or no water or fertilizer, is not invasive and can be propagated from cuttings easily. Great presentation, I loved it!@@GrowingInTheGarden
I love watching your videos. You are so informative and explain everything well. I live in n.phx and recently took up gardening. Thank you so much for the information
Great video! I'm especially intrigued by the Sky Flower vine that you mentioned. Bower Vine is also nice (Pandorea jasminoides), and seems to bloom most of the year in Zone 9b in Inland Southern California. The blooms also fall off clean.
Really enjoyed this video. I live in the Augusta, Georgia area, and I had never heard of some of these vines. My daughter and grandchildren moved to the Paradise Valley, AZ area about 2 years ago, we'll be visiting the first week of May. I cannot wait to see some of these vines growing in Arizona. It gets really hot here in Georgia, so we should be able to grow these same vines, if they can tolerate the humidity. The biggest problem will be finding them at a nursery around here. It seems like all of the area nurseries get the exact same plants in every year. I guess they only order the ones they know will sell well, but it is kind of limiting for the adventurous gardener, and for someone like me who hates to grow the same plants I see in everyone's yard. I absolutely refuse to grow Crepe Myrtle trees even though they are very beautiful, because every yard and business in the Augusta, GA area has Crepe Myrtle trees, so they have become boring to me. I would love to try and grow some of the beautiful flowering vines you mentioned, maybe I can order them online.
Try joining a plant swap group in your area or start one. I get a lot of great unusual plant starts through them, get free plants, and meet nice planty people. Also, there are some unusual crepe myrtles out there if you search for them. I have 2 candy cane ones. Good luck from here in Houston.
Thank you so much for your very helpful information, I am new to the garden as I know very little about it, but I love beauty, I like my garden to looks nice, so I found your Chanel, I live in Chandler, and I am so glad i found you have flowers and vegetables in your garden, that’s exactly what I am looking for, I will follow your monthly planting schedule to establish my garden little by little, I bought some roses from DA, I hope they can survive here, I will need to learn from you, your information is very helpful, and you look so pretty in every video.
Thank you for all the great information, Angela! The vining plants I’m currently having luck with are yams, lemon cucumbers, watermelon, luffa and morning glories. My honeysuckle is doing alright but isn’t taking off the way I’d like. I’m thinking about moving it to partial shade.
Loved this. We have a vine, in the East (south East Asia) known as The Rangoon Creeper. So pretty and so fragrant. Locally we call the chandelier vine, because the clusters of flowers droop down in bunches, just like miniature chandeliers ❤
Dag, this is a great video. All the vines I want to grow, how to grow them and pruning are listed in this video. So informative and I am more confident that I'll have success this fall with plants that will survive next summers heat!! Thank you so much.
This summer I grew two vines in pots and did well as long as watered thoroughly, coral vine and Mexican flame vine. Neither grew large enough to bloom as I started them late in the season but they did reach the top of the pergola.
Bougainvillea, Lilac Vine, Grape Ivy, Lilac Vine. Yellow Butterfly Vine would be my top choices for containers Almost any of the annual vining plants I mentioned would also be good choices for containers. Use as large (at least 10-20 gallons, think half-wine barrel size) a container as possible, fill it all the way with good potting soil, consider adding an oya (growoya.com/?ref=aReoN) and they should be good to go. Know that containers heat up more quickly (and cool down) and require more watering and feeding than plants in the ground. Good luck!
I grow mostly annuals like luffah, winter squash, Thai purple longyard bean and purple hyacinth bean and the latter is my favorite. You may want to try in your garden. They are edible, too!!
So happy I can across your channel! I want to download all your knowledge!!! I’m in QC Az and Love the smell of pink Jasmine but have never had any luck. Do you have tips?
I grow snail vine here in Las Vegas. It’s a slow starter but once it gets going Look Out! The flowers are purple. I wish I could post a picture on here of mine.
My favorite annual vine is Scarlet Runner bean. I have tried 3 times to grow passionfruit and had no success. When is the best time to plant them? Those white Rose's above the arch were beautiful, how do you keep them dead headed?
Best chance for planting passion fruit is probably in the spring after frost. I have to use a ladder to deadhead the arch roses. I haven't had any luck with scarlet runner bean. When do you plant yours?
@@GrowingInTheGarden I plant them in spring, they need a large trellis. I grew them on a 5ft trellis and they grew to the top of it then and fell forward and were nearly touching the ground.
Scarlet Runner bean has the reputation of hating heat. What climate are you in? If you are in a cooler summer area like northern CA, you should plant high altitude Passiflora (like P. mollisima from the Andes) instead of her P. edulis (?) or the (z6, occasionally z5b) hardy, eastern USA native Passiflora incarnata. In general plant in early to mid spring, so heat doesn't kill plants with undeveloped root systems. Fall is also cool, but it you have frost, plants will survive it better if they have big root systems, and that takes time.
I don't know is this will do well in the desert Stephanotis and Clematis. I have a pink Wisteria and also Plunbago is not a vine but it grows like one. Another one i love is the Garlic vine and Petrea I love having thons of flowers everywhere in my pergola. Thank you for the video, very informative.
Great information. We have an african sumac tree that died but I love its silhouette and want to plant a vine to climb up it. I'm thinking of a Lady Banks. What are your thoughts or suggestions?
I am in Houston and we prep our beds for good drainage by bringing in a good garden soil and pile it up with a brick border for our flowerbeds. Then we add some compost to the top 2 to 3 inches. For larger plants, we dig a hole in our clay soil 2x wider than the rootball, and make sure the soil level of the plant is 4 to 6 higher than the soil level in the ground. Mix your existing soil with a good garden mix and pile it in the hole. Add compost on the top 2 to 3 inches of soil. I hope this makes sense. 😋 Feeding an organic liquid fertilizer once a month will help convert your clay into great soil over time. I use a lot of fish fertilizer or Medina Garrett Juice.
I think I have coral vine growing along my fence 🤔 same vine and similar leaves It likes to try and grow into the tree's 😬 kinda takes over from there. I have to rip it out, and it's hard with their grabber tendrils lol
In south India the Boghn ville ( spelling ok?) ,,, grows like mad without a drop of water everywhere mostly on roadside!,, I can't understand why people don't care about these beauties! I want to start a Boghan ville society!
Really well-done video specific for Arizonians! Looking forward to trying my hand at growing coral vines on my back fence. I have Cape Honeysuckles that do pretty well but lose their deep green color and struggle a bit during the hottest summer months in the direct sun.
Loved the presentation. Very well organized with lots of information and great pictures. Any suggestions for a wall in a courtyard facing north with little sun? Something with colorful flowers. Star Flower? Star Jasmine?
Great video thank you for all the great ideas! I know I'm late to watching this video but just found your channel. Question; have you ever grown Garlic Vine in Arizona from seed? If so how did it do, is it a fast or slow grower and is it messy. Any information or help is truly appreciated! Love your videos, thanks for sharing all this great information 😊
Thank you for this video! It’s very helpful. I had a question about a plant not talked about. When you showed the passion fruit vine, what are the two shrubs growing below it on the wall?? They have a gray-ish leaf color with dark stem, almost oak leaf shape looking.
I'm looking for tips on what type of low maintenance wall climbing vine can grow on my exterior wall in a wall planter so it can grow and spread on my exterior wall to cover my wall from the hot sun. Summer temperatures can range from 80-110 degrees hot dry climate, and winter can be as low as 30-35 degrees. Any ideas?
Thank you for the info. I’ve always wanted to grown jasmine but the right location for my home is next to the foundation of our home. Can jasmine grown in containers? I don’t want to be watering right next to the foundation. As always thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Foundations in hot dry climates actually require irrigation to keep the dry soil from shrinking back and causing a place for water to flow. You do need a rather large pot. 25 gallon would not be too big.
I have a jasmine that over the years got very thick and underneath has a lot of dried branches . Can I cut very low and let it grow new branches and train it again on the trellis ?
1- Bougainvillea
2- Cape honeysuckle (Tecoma Capensis)
3- Clibing roses (Rosa species)
4- Coral Vine or Queen's Wreath (Antigonon leptopus)
5- Lady Bank's Rose (Rosa Bankstae)
6- Lavender Star Flower (Grewiam Occidentalis)
7- Lilac Vine (Hardenbergia Violacea)
8- Passion fruit (Passiflora edulis)
9- Skyflower (Duranta Erecta)
10- Star Jasmine (Trachelospermun Jasminoides)
11- Grapes
12- Pink trumpet vine
13- Grape ivy vine
14- Primose jasmine vine
15- Cat claw vine
16- Yellow orchid vine
17- Potato vine
Thank you
which are fragrance?
Thx!!!
Any recommondations on where to buy them and what price they may be.
Are these good for Arizona hot sun?
Love ur channel. Always clear, informative, and to the point. No loud crazy music, teasers, exaggerations, or dragging out with unnecessary fluff n stuff. New subscriber.
So true! Sometimes I can’t watch a whole program just because of the music🙉
A word to the wise: if you grow cat's claw you WILL need to cut it back to the ground periodically, it's extremely vigorous and will grow over itself leaving a ton of dead mass between the new growth and the surface it's climbing on. If i were to grow it i would cut it all back down to the ground every 3 years or so for maitenance (gives you lots of material for compost)
I moved to AZ 1 1/2 yrs ago from Ill. I had no idea that there were so many flowering plants that do well out in the desert! Thank you for showing me that I can have a garden again both flowers & vegetables. I LOVE your channel! Thank you!
I had no ideas there were so many varieties of blooming vines. Thanks for sharing👍🏾
You are so welcome
Arabian Jasmine is a vine but can be trimmed as a bush. I have grown them for years and I wouldn’t be without one!❤️
Good choice!
@Marlablum5534 I just bought the most beautifully fragrant Arabian Jasmine that I’d like to grow on the east side of my home by our bedroom windows. I’m in 9b So Cal, inland where we have hardly any moisture so very dry heat. It would receive all the direct early day sun, do you think it will handle it without too much scorching? I’m hoping to espalier it on my stucco, so I know it’ll have the heat of the house in the winter which I think it’ll love.
@@sharabenson it should be fine.
@@sharabensonI have an Arabian jasmine in zone 8. It's gorgeous but I don't know if it will survive winter in middle Georgia. Any thoughts? 😊
Thanks! This has been my first year of growing Malabar spinach. I shaded it in June, and it's still producing well (no bolting) in the shade!
Another great vining plants that does well in the Phoenix area is the Rangoon creeper. It’s a tropical vine that handles full Arizona sun quite well.
My favorite hot weather vine is the flaming glory bower vine…it blooms from December to January in the brightest red I have ever seen .The beautiful dark green leaves are a great background to the bright red clusters of this beauty.
Great selection! Because of you I decided on a climbing rose. I need it when I look out the window, I don't want to see my neighbor's property.
Good choice!
I loved having a snail vine years ago in Mesa and it did very well in all day sun
I am here in Houston and love my snail vine! 😊 🐌
Is it an attractant any garden pest?
I was wondering about that!
I have a variegated white (bract) bougainvillea! She’s a unicorn!
A couple of others worth mentioning
- tangerine cross vine (huge vine that can handle heat and it’s self clinging)
- creeping fig (self clinging prefers partial shade)
Thanks 🙏
I enjoyed watching your video. I love climbing flowers. I love them all. Watching from the Philippines..
This video should have 0 dislikes, 1,000,000 likes
Ha! Thanks!
What an awesome video!
Thanks so much!
I love Tangerine Beauty Crossvine and just discovered Lavender Trumpet Vine.
So much information 😊 Thank you so so much for sharing ❤❤🤗
You are so welcome!
This is a really great video! Very informative and well done! Thanks
THANK YOU❤️‼️ I lost all my trees/house in the Paradise Ca Camp Fire & am starting from scratch. Our weather is similar to yours & getting hotter every year. Your info is priceless.
So sorry to hear that. Best wishes as you begin again.
Bougainvillea are beautiful, however you failed to mention that they have long nasty thorns! Not ideal for high traffic areas or child friendly.
Yes, i have one. And they torn quite large
I would say ideal to keep children out
True! I remember stepping on one as a kid 😵
I'm always so worried about my little dauschaund when he's out in the yard I'm always cleaning and raking in my yard.
Yes you’ll need to outlaw Bougainvillea to ensure we are all safe from thorns...also vaccinate and wear a mask...double it for kids
Thumbs up for gardening in AZ! The sky flower vine is my favorite
It's at the top of my list too. Great vine.
Passion Fruit Vine attracts Gulf Fritillary butterflies too!
yes! I've had so many this year on mine.
@@GrowingInTheGarden How do you keep the vine alive with all the butterfly catipillars eating it?
@@120toes
Caterpillars won’t kill passion vine. Please grow a native vine or one that you’re certain is not invasive. Also, some non-native varieties are actually poisonous to the caterpillars, which the egg laying butterfly doesn’t know.
Your channel is so great. Been watching you for years! Thank you!
Wow, thank you!
Thanks for your list of plants. I live in a 10a zone in Western Australia. We have brutal summers here with possibly one of the worst heatwaves I've experienced over this last summer (temps at 110° for a whole week). Whatever survived remained and what didn't got thrown out. 😂
I live in a area that gets these temps also. Cape honeysuckle does well and holds up along with the roses. Other vines to mention are Wisteria, morning glories, Passionfruit, and bougainvillea!
A beautiful way to display parthenocissus is to have mesh screen be the infill of your metal frame that sits mounted away from the house wall. It can be installed independent of the wall as well.
The adhesive pads cling and allow the plant to be perfectly flat to the surface, and the leaves lay as shingles. I have positioned a tall one just off a west facing widow. From inside the house I am able to watch the chameleons come and go seeking the shade. It is pretty from both sides, and offers a unique perspective.
Thank you! I was just thinking today how I wanted a vine to cover our ugly brick walls! Living in suburbs of Phoenix, I'm always worried the sun will just fry whatever I put up.
You're welcome! Thanks for watching.
I am here in Houston and lately the summers have been crazy hot! I have most of the vines you are talking about but also have a few others for you to try that do well in our Texas heat. Mascagnia Butterfly Vine, Coral Honeysuckle, Peggy Martin Climbing Rose, Rangoon Creeper, Mexican Flame Vine, Summer Wisteria, Snail Vine. I have just found your videos and love them. ❤ Thank you!
Thank you for the tips! I'll check them out.
Yeah, my vote is for Mexican Flame Vine. They have changed the genus like three times now, but it has beautiful red/orange flowers (think iceplant, only bigger), grows fast to 15 feet plus, loves a lot of heat, uses little or no water or fertilizer, is not invasive and can be propagated from cuttings easily. Great presentation, I loved it!@@GrowingInTheGarden
I love watching your videos. You are so informative and explain everything well. I live in n.phx and recently took up gardening. Thank you so much for the information
Great video! I'm especially intrigued by the Sky Flower vine that you mentioned. Bower Vine is also nice (Pandorea jasminoides), and seems to bloom most of the year in Zone 9b in Inland Southern California. The blooms also fall off clean.
I have the sky flower vine and I 💜 mine so much, definitely a show stopper!🌱
Really enjoyed this video. I live in the Augusta, Georgia area, and I had never heard of some of these vines. My daughter and grandchildren moved to the Paradise Valley, AZ area about 2 years ago, we'll be visiting the first week of May. I cannot wait to see some of these vines growing in Arizona. It gets really hot here in Georgia, so we should be able to grow these same vines, if they can tolerate the humidity. The biggest problem will be finding them at a nursery around here. It seems like all of the area nurseries get the exact same plants in every year. I guess they only order the ones they know will sell well, but it is kind of limiting for the adventurous gardener, and for someone like me who hates to grow the same plants I see in everyone's yard. I absolutely refuse to grow Crepe Myrtle trees even though they are very beautiful, because every yard and business in the Augusta, GA area has Crepe Myrtle trees, so they have become boring to me. I would love to try and grow some of the beautiful flowering vines you mentioned, maybe I can order them online.
I'm not familiar with Lavender Star Flower and Lilac vine, but I know all the other vines she mentioned can take the humidity here in coastal Texas.
Try joining a plant swap group in your area or start one. I get a lot of great unusual plant starts through them, get free plants, and meet nice planty people. Also, there are some unusual crepe myrtles out there if you search for them. I have 2 candy cane ones. Good luck from here in Houston.
Thank you so much for your very helpful information, I am new to the garden as I know very little about it, but I love beauty, I like my garden to looks nice, so I found your Chanel, I live in Chandler, and I am so glad i found you have flowers and vegetables in your garden, that’s exactly what I am looking for, I will follow your monthly planting schedule to establish my garden little by little, I bought some roses from DA, I hope they can survive here, I will need to learn from you, your information is very helpful, and you look so pretty in every video.
Thank you so much, best of luck to you!
Thank you for all the great information, Angela! The vining plants I’m currently having luck with are yams, lemon cucumbers, watermelon, luffa and morning glories. My honeysuckle is doing alright but isn’t taking off the way I’d like. I’m thinking about moving it to partial shade.
Nice! You have a lot growing. Best of luck to you!
Morning glories grow in the desert?
@@Jenoveryonder Yes, they grow very well! They reseed almost too well. 😂
Loved this. We have a vine, in the East (south East Asia) known as The Rangoon Creeper. So pretty and so fragrant. Locally we call the chandelier vine, because the clusters of flowers droop down in bunches, just like miniature chandeliers ❤
It's beautiful! Enjoy!
You missed honeysuckle, smell so good! Also can make flower tea. You need to try.
I love flowers n nature very much l felt very nice
Bougainvillea bracts…. Natures confetti
That's a great way to look at it.
Amazing video. Wish I could grow all of them. Specially liked sky flowers.
Awesome presentation! Thanks so much. So informative and inspiring!
A really lovely and useful video. Thank you.
Glad it was helpful!
U can add Thunbergia grandiflora to ur garden too. It produces gorgeous flowers.
Good tip, thanks!
Those coral vines grow like weeds here in Houston and I love that the bees love love ❤️ them
Dag, this is a great video. All the vines I want to grow, how to grow them and pruning are listed in this video. So informative and I am more confident that I'll have success this fall with plants that will survive next summers heat!! Thank you so much.
Loved your video and got to know plenty of information. Pretty garden I must say,
A passionate gardener, kudos.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Besides the roses mentioned, which of these vines would work well in pots? So happy to find an AZ gardener on UA-cam! Thx!
This summer I grew two vines in pots and did well as long as watered thoroughly, coral vine and Mexican flame vine. Neither grew large enough to bloom as I started them late in the season but they did reach the top of the pergola.
Bougainvillea, Lilac Vine, Grape Ivy, Lilac Vine. Yellow Butterfly Vine would be my top choices for containers Almost any of the annual vining plants I mentioned would also be good choices for containers. Use as large (at least 10-20 gallons, think half-wine barrel size) a container as possible, fill it all the way with good potting soil, consider adding an oya (growoya.com/?ref=aReoN) and they should be good to go. Know that containers heat up more quickly (and cool down) and require more watering and feeding than plants in the ground. Good luck!
@@GrowingInTheGarden Thank you!
Pandorea pandorana/Wonga wonga vine grow well in my area (San Francisco). Trumpet shape with either white or yellow flower. Very interesting plant.
They are all very excited 😊 & excellent
I have many favorites but, top on my list is the Tangerine Beauty Cross Vine!
Good choice! I just planted that as well. Looking forward to the blooms.
I grow mostly annuals like luffah, winter squash, Thai purple longyard bean and purple hyacinth bean and the latter is my favorite. You may want to try in your garden. They are edible, too!!
I love growing both of those. So many great options. Thanks for sharing.
Glad I came across this video. Super helpful. Thanks!
Beautiful 😍 Thanks for sharing 👍 Very much appreciated. 👍
..beautiful flowering vines....love fr.Philippines...
Thanks for watching!
Thanks 😍😍😍😍😍😍😍the video 😍😍😍😍😍
Welcome 😊
Very very nice video.description is also very beautiful.
Thanks!
Thanks for the ideas. I love Clematis. I'm in South Africa. Janine
Clematis is lovely. Hello from Arizona, USA.
You didn’t mention about “ Black eyed Susan “ that my favorite vine flowers, Thunbergia will grow as a parental .
Thank you for your beautiful video
The infill mesh is the best quality window screening for longevity and transparency.
Japanese honey suckel
Mexican flame vine
Wisteria
Chocolate vine
And my fav Rangoon creeper
Very informative! Thank you !
So happy I can across your channel! I want to download all your knowledge!!! I’m in QC Az and Love the smell of pink Jasmine but have never had any luck. Do you have tips?
Give it afternoon shade, good soil and even watering.
Seminole pumpkin growing in Florida 👍🏽❤️❤️❤️
I would also recommend kei apples. Bonis you can eat the fruit.
going shopping soon for some vines! thank you
I have 2 greenhouse frames. Could you talk about greenhouse gardening through the az winter?
Still learning about that one. I don't have a green house.
I grow snail vine here in Las Vegas. It’s a slow starter but once it gets going Look Out! The flowers are purple. I wish I could post a picture on here of mine.
Snail vine is beautiful!
Does it do well in full, direct LV afternoon sun also without scorching?
loved all. the info!!
Amazing garden lady
My favorite annual vine is Scarlet Runner bean. I have tried 3 times to grow passionfruit and had no success. When is the best time to plant them? Those white Rose's above the arch were beautiful, how do you keep them dead headed?
Best chance for planting passion fruit is probably in the spring after frost. I have to use a ladder to deadhead the arch roses. I haven't had any luck with scarlet runner bean. When do you plant yours?
@@GrowingInTheGarden I plant them in spring, they need a large trellis. I grew them on a 5ft trellis and they grew to the top of it then and fell forward and were nearly touching the ground.
Scarlet Runner bean has the reputation of hating heat. What climate are you in? If you are in a cooler summer area like northern CA, you should plant high altitude Passiflora (like P. mollisima from the Andes) instead of her P. edulis (?) or the (z6, occasionally z5b) hardy, eastern USA native Passiflora incarnata. In general plant in early to mid spring, so heat doesn't kill plants with undeveloped root systems. Fall is also cool, but it you have frost, plants will survive it better if they have big root systems, and that takes time.
@@Erewhon2024 I'm in AZ, 9b. I planted the scarlet runner bean on the east side of my house, so it got afternoon shade.
I don't know is this will do well in the desert Stephanotis and Clematis. I have a pink Wisteria and also Plunbago is not a vine but it grows like one. Another one i love is the Garlic vine and Petrea I love having thons of flowers everywhere in my pergola. Thank you for the video, very informative.
Great information. We have an african sumac tree that died but I love its silhouette and want to plant a vine to climb up it. I'm thinking of a Lady Banks. What are your thoughts or suggestions?
Awesome ❤
Thank you so much 💗🥰
Loved the video!
Great information!
And yes, Rosa Lady Banks is in a class by herself ! Covering 8000square feet of Tombstone AZ., she is the single largest rose plant.
This is so helpful! Do you have information or a video about how to make sure you have well draining soil?
No, but that's a good idea.
I am in Houston and we prep our beds for good drainage by bringing in a good garden soil and pile it up with a brick border for our flowerbeds. Then we add some compost to the top 2 to 3 inches. For larger plants, we dig a hole in our clay soil 2x wider than the rootball, and make sure the soil level of the plant is 4 to 6 higher than the soil level in the ground. Mix your existing soil with a good garden mix and pile it in the hole. Add compost on the top 2 to 3 inches of soil. I hope this makes sense. 😋 Feeding an organic liquid fertilizer once a month will help convert your clay into great soil over time. I use a lot of fish fertilizer or Medina Garrett Juice.
Thank you! This is great!
good collections
Was wondering if Rangoon vine grows there..they are gorgeous.
I'm not sure.
I think I have coral vine growing along my fence 🤔 same vine and similar leaves
It likes to try and grow into the tree's 😬 kinda takes over from there. I have to rip it out, and it's hard with their grabber tendrils lol
Thank you.
Lovely ....great info....thank you
So nice of you
Passion fruit vine is invasive....growing everywhere , and it grows the fruit the first year.
In south India the Boghn ville ( spelling ok?) ,,, grows like mad without a drop of water everywhere mostly on roadside!,, I can't understand why people don't care about these beauties! I want to start a Boghan ville society!
The Lady Banks rose is thornless. "Incense" passionflower is hardy to 0 degrees, but sends out lots of root suckers.
Really well-done video specific for Arizonians! Looking forward to trying my hand at growing coral vines on my back fence. I have Cape Honeysuckles that do pretty well but lose their deep green color and struggle a bit during the hottest summer months in the direct sun.
Loved the presentation. Very well organized with lots of information and great pictures. Any suggestions for a wall in a courtyard facing north with little sun? Something with colorful flowers. Star Flower? Star Jasmine?
Great video thank you for all the great ideas! I know I'm late to watching this video but just found your channel. Question; have you ever grown Garlic Vine in Arizona from seed? If so how did it do, is it a fast or slow grower and is it messy. Any information or help is truly appreciated! Love your videos, thanks for sharing all this great information 😊
How about snail vine? I tried to pul it out and it regrew so fast!
So many great options!
thanks for sharing a useful video
Thanks for watching!
Where did you get the trellis for your climbing roses ? 5:20 on video.
Thank you for this video! It’s very helpful. I had a question about a plant not talked about. When you showed the passion fruit vine, what are the two shrubs growing below it on the wall?? They have a gray-ish leaf color with dark stem, almost oak leaf shape looking.
Those are roselle plants.
Butterfly bush it’s one of the flowers that last long in the summer
How about the American Bittersweet ?
I'm looking for tips on what type of low maintenance wall climbing vine can grow on my exterior wall in a wall planter so it can grow and spread on my exterior wall to cover my wall from the hot sun. Summer temperatures can range from 80-110 degrees hot dry climate, and winter can be as low as 30-35 degrees. Any ideas?
Chaote Squash and Bottle Gourd are edible vines and good for health.
Thank you for the info. I’ve always wanted to grown jasmine but the right location for my home is next to the foundation of our home. Can jasmine grown in containers? I don’t want to be watering right next to the foundation. As always thank you for sharing your knowledge.
If it was a large enough container in the shade, maybe? Containers heat up more than in ground beds.
Foundations in hot dry climates actually require irrigation to keep the dry soil from shrinking back and causing a place for water to flow.
You do need a rather large pot.
25 gallon would not be too big.
Great vid! Are you familiar with Crossvine Tangerine Beauty?
Yes, after filming this I planted some and it's blooming so well right now. Amazing vine.
@@GrowingInTheGarden Also in Phx full sun hopeful for similar success I was a little concerned read it can only tolerate Zone 6-9?
Love your videos! Do you have recommendations for starting coral vine? I've been trying to start it from seed but haven't had luck transplanting.
Look for transplants - It's tough to get going from seed
Ok will do, thanks for the quick reply!
I have a jasmine that over the years got very thick and underneath has a lot of dried branches . Can I cut very low and let it grow new branches and train it again on the trellis ?
Probably, wait until fall (if you live in a mild winter climate) or spring to cut it back.