Jump to content

Passion flower :clematis


mooky
 Share

Recommended Posts

If he left it alone it would not be so bad.  Surveyors are now getting sued for not mentioning it in the survey.  See what you have done now.  I get all hot under the collar just from thinking about it.

I have seen it growing out of victorian stone retaining walls of 20ft in height and it has literally bulged the wall right out.  They now say if you have it growing nearby you should move.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote user="mooky"]My passion flower has had flowers in abundance for the last two years. Looks awful now, should I prune a little bit or what.

Also.Clematis. How do you pronounce it correctly? Is it Clem a tis   or cle mate is[/quote]

Hi Mooky.

I lopped mine (4 years old) back by two thirds about a week ago, and it's already started sprouting again.

Mine's on a south facing wall though. I don't know whether I'd have been so daring otherwise but it was a terrible mess (like yours, I suspect) and something had to be done.

The pronunciation of Clematis is your first suggested option - Clem-a-tis with no particular emphasis on any of the syllables.

Having skipped through the thread I hope Katie and or/ Twinks haven't killed any innocent climbers overnight. [:D]

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Oh!  Is this a gardening thread?[8-)]

Sorry[:$] 

Hey Tresco! 

 I just pronounced Clematis out loud as you suggested with no particular emphasis on any of the syllables - and my husband told me I should go and lie down for a few hours[:-))]

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Katie

You should prune Clematis annually, BUT the timing depends on which one you have - early or late flowering.

I suggest you google it to try to work out which one you have & also do you remember when it flowers?   I don't do mine very much, they're on a trellis, and grow like mad, gorgeous when flowering - they like their 'heads' in the sun, roots in the shade. I tend to 'tidy' them a bit - nothing more.

Surprised to hear of passion flower growing - presumably you are in the south?  does it fruit? (so many varieties of these too)

regards

tegwini

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote user="TWINKLE"]Oh!  Is this a gardening thread?[8-)]

Sorry[:$] 

[/quote]

You were talking about gardening for much of the time though, before moving on to extermination of Knotweed, which is commendable.[:D]

Tegwini I'm not sure who you were asking but I'm in Charente Maritime and my Passionflower only stopped flowering about 4 weeks ago. There were plenty of fruits too.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Knotweed

Next door have it and feed it. I didn't have to bad a time with it last year. It seems to like their unattended garden better;

My passion flower plants had thousands of flowers last year. I don't want to destroy it by bad pruning;

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Katie

Problem soil can be improved - needs turning over & stuff dug into it.  Horsey poo sitting on top won't do much good unless dug in - but improving your soil  can take ages ...

I make compost - kitchen/garden stuff, almost anything which I find helps.   Last Autumn we piled leaves on the veg garden in Wiltshire (couldn't find anywhere to put them as we had so many) & not only did the leaves keep down the weeds which would usually be sprouting by now, but since the leaves have vanished I can only assume rotted in/worms comsumed or pulled under by worms???  Seems like R&D work, hopefully this makes sense to you!

Gardening is such trial & error...

regards

tegwini

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We have a passionflower here, Quimper in Finistere. It grows like a weed covering the entrance to the garage. It does die back a bit in winter. I hack it back a lot in the autumn, (it is trying to cover the rhododendron next to it), and from time to time in the summer. If it wants to it grows very rapidly. It does have fruit which are edible but don't really taste of much. It layers and also self seeds itself. I don't mind the flowers are terrific. It can behave like a trifid though.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

It looked worse after I had pruned it. I realised I needed more support for it. So I have stripped it right down. I know it won't grow this year much as I have chopped off main stems. There is also honeysuckle growing there. I will give that a chance this year.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

You would be surprised, passionflower grows about 3 times the speed of honeysuckle. It can be chopped right back and at the end of June is taking over again. One of the nice things about it is that it flowers all summer. It never is covered in flowers but it flowers from about June until end of October. We have to cut it back about four or five a year otherwise we can't get into the side door of the garage. Even so we sometimes wonder if we are going to be eaten.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Please sign in to comment

You will be able to leave a comment after signing in



Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...