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Exotic Annual Vines by Rita Pelczar
Add a few of these climbers to your garden and its ambiance instantly
takes a tropical turn.
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Since summer in southern Maryland, where I garden, does a pretty good
imitation of the Tropic of Cancer, it isn’t surprising that so many
tropical vines seem at home here. Most are perennials in their native
clime, but they grow here as annuals. Choices among tropical climbers
are many—narrowing the selection is the real challenge. In one way, it’s
fortunate that the vines usually don’t survive our chilly winters—that
means new vines can be sampled each year.
Supporting Lazy Habits
A vine’s stems lack the rigidity to stand
upright. They need some external support to grow upwards, and only
gravity to grow down. Given their lax growth habit and wandering nature,
planning is essential before you plant a vine in your garden. Lazy of
habit they might be, but they are plants on the move! Determine in
advance where you want your vine to grow and how this growth will be
supported or it may become a nuisance.
Vines have developed several strategies
to climb, which affects the type of support they need. Some vines cling
to a flat support, like a wall, with aerial roots or specialized
adhesive tendrils. Others simply lean on or droop over nearby structures
or plants. And some vines climb by twining their stems, leaves, petioles
(leaf stem), or tendrils around whatever is handy.
The vines we grow as annuals are, for the
most part, twiners. A trellis, fence, obelisk, mailbox, lamppost, porch
railings, even strings tied to a sturdy overhead support, provide the
necessary framework for accommodating their aerial feats. Look around
your yard and you are likely to find a few potential vine supports. Or a
wide range of freestanding supports can be purchased or economically
constructed—bamboo poles work well.
If planted in a hanging basket, a twiner
like black-eyed Susan vine or purple bell vine will wind its way up the
hanging wires and cascade over the edge, producing several feet of
vertical growth. You can also add tropical flair to a porch or patio by
combining a vine in a planter with colorful annuals. Allow the vine to
weave through the other plants.
Irresistible Ipomoeas
Some
of the most beautiful and exotic vines are members of the genus Ipomoea.
My favorite, without hesitation, is the moonflower (I. alba, USDA
Hardiness Zone 12–15, AHS Heat Zone 12–10), a perennial twiner found in
tropical regions worldwide. If ever there was a more romantic garden
inhabitant, I’ve not met it. The six-inch pure white, silky flowers
stand out against large, heart-shaped leaves. The blooms are so fragrant
that you can tell when one is open well before you see it, and if you
bring a freshly opened flower indoors, its perfume will scent an entire
room.
The best thing about a moonflower is watching one open. Catch it at the
right moment, sometime shortly after dusk, and before your eyes, its
spirally folded, four-inch bud unfurls. Each flower lasts only one
night, usually withering by mid-morning, but new buds open each evening.
Growing moonflowers could hardly be
easier. Its seed needs a little scarifying—that is, filing or nicking
the hard seed coat—followed by soaking overnight in water before you sow
it, but once planted, it grows quickly. I sow mine directly in the
garden, although you can start them indoors about eight weeks before the
last frost. Don’t sow or transplant moonflowers in the garden until the
weather has settled and the soil has warmed a bit.
Site moonflowers in full sun in rich,
moist, well-drained soil in a spot where you can observe it up close, or
near a window so its scent can be carried indoors. I grow mine along the
front porch near the swing where we can watch its enchanting evening
performance.
Although they are altogether different,
the flowers of mina or Spanish flag (Ipomoea lobata, syn. Mina lobata,
Zones 13–15, 12–10) are nearly as exotic as the moonflower. They are
borne along one side of a curved, eight-to 12-inch stem. The flowers
open from the base scarlet-red, maturing to orange, then yellow, then
ivory. They persist a good while, so each stem features all these
colors. I get impatient waiting for that first bloom to appear, which
may not happen until early August, but once flowering begins, it is
spectacular and non-stop until frost.
A native of the American tropics, mina’s
culture is the same as moonflower, but wait until outdoor temperatures
stay above 50 degrees Fahrenheit at night before moving plants
outdoors—mina is extremely sensitive to cold. Once the seed germinates,
stems grow rapidly to 15 feet, supporting a dense cover of three-lobed
leaves. It grows well in containers or in the ground, and can easily be
trained to a trellis or strings to serve as an effective screen.
Clock Vines
From the other side of the globe come the
clock vines of the genus Thunbergia. The species most commonly found in
gardens is the black-eyed Susan vine (T. alata, Zones 11–15, 12–10), a
native of tropical Africa. It bears bright yellow, funnel-shaped flowers
that are an inch and a half across, with five broad lobes and a
contrasting center that is very, very dark.
Compared to many tropical vines, its
stems are thin, with a very delicate appearance, and it is often grown
in hanging baskets. But appearances can be deceiving. Last year, I
decided to grow the variety ‘Blushing Susie’ with its shades of red,
pink, and ivory flowers in a bed where I had placed a large weathered
tree stump. I figured the stump would provide support and a pleasing
weathered gray background for the colorful flowers. Once the vine took
hold, however, it completely obscured the stump and continued to grow
six to eight feet in all directions. It was a battle to keep it from
overtaking surrounding plants.
This year, I will restrain it in a large
pot. But if I needed a fast-growing screen, I’d plant it in the ground
and hang strings or plastic mesh for its stems to climb. I’m tempted to
try other varieties—like ‘White-eyed Susie’ with dark-centered white
flowers or ‘Sunrise Surprise’ with flowers that range from ivory and
yellow to apricot and rose—but I’ve decided the yellow flowers of the
species with that intriguingly dark center are still the most dramatic.
Mandevilla
The
genus Mandevilla consists of 120 or so woody stemmed twiners from
Central and South America; several have become very popular in the past
decade for use as summer annuals in temperate regions. All produce
large, funnel-shaped flowers with five broadly spreading lobes. They are
quite easy to grow, tolerating heat and producing flowers steadily from
early summer to fall. They grow best in full sun in fertile,
well-drained soil with a regular supply of water.
Mandevilla 5amoena ‘Alice du Pont’ (Zones
13–15, 12–1) is among the most popular varieties. Its four-inch flowers
open a pale pink, deepening to rose-pink with a darker pink throat and
sometimes a yellow eye. They are borne in clusters on robust twining
stems that can grow to 20 feet. Similar in habit is M. splendens; its
pink flowers display yellow throats. New hybrid Mandevilla selections
include red flowered ‘Ruby Star’, ‘White Delight’ with white flowers
that are blushed with pink, and the pink double-flowered ‘Pink Parfait’.
Mandevilla plants have become widely
available at nurseries in spring. If you purchase one that has been
growing in a greenhouse, acclimate it to outdoor conditions gradually
once all danger of frost has passed. Mandevillas grow well in
containers, and this is convenient if you plan to overwinter it indoors.
I have not had any trouble carrying plants over the winter, but because
I don’t have a greenhouse, my plants survive in a state of
semi-dormancy. It takes some time for them to return to bloom when I
move them outdoors. If you are an impatient gardener like me, you may
end up purchasing a new blooming plant each year anyway.
Photo credits: Moonflower by Rita Pelczar; Mandevilla by David
Cavagnaro
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