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I want to use about an 7-9 foot space between two windows. The area gets plenty of sun, but not too much.

2006-06-17 06:09:21 · 14 answers · asked by pottersclay70 6 in Home & Garden Garden & Landscape

I prefer a perennial.

2006-06-17 06:09:48 · update #1

I live in Northwest Florida which is zone 8.

2006-06-17 07:26:51 · update #2

14 answers

I like Carolina Jasmine very much.
Also, Passion flowers

2006-06-17 06:25:06 · answer #1 · answered by Texas Cowboy 7 · 2 0

clematis

Any of various ornamental, mostly climbing plants of the genus Clematis, native chiefly to northern temperate regions and having showy, variously colored flowers or decorative fruit clusters.

Plant Characteristics

Clematis (KLEM-a-tis) is a member of the Ranunculaceae (buttercup) family. The word is from the Greek and means "vine." This genus includes approximately 250 species and numerous garden hybrids. It is a varied genus, made up of mostly woody, deciduous climbing plants, though a few are evergreen and a few herbaceous. There is great variety in flower form, color, bloom season, foliage effect and plant height. Leaves are opposite on the stem and mostly compound with three to five leaflets. The leaf stalk twines like a tendril and is responsible for giving the plant support. The flowers are showy, having four (sometimes five to eight) petal-like sepals (no true petals) in numerous colors and shades. There are three general flower forms: small white flowers in panicles or loose and irregular spreading clusters; bell or urn-shaped flowers; and flat or open flowers. The fruit is often showy as well, being a ball shaped, "feathered" structure. Clematis are hardy plants (many are hardy to USDA zone 3) and can survive for 25 years or more. The large-flowered hybrids may have blooms ranging from four to ten inches in diameter and as many as 100 blooms per plant in a season. The species types have blooms ranging from one-half to three inches in diameter with diverse shapes and habit; many of the species have fragrant blooms, which is not true of most hybrids. The one fault of clematis is that they are not attractive during winter, when they are a tangle of bare stems.

2006-06-17 06:18:25 · answer #2 · answered by melissa 6 · 0 0

Soil already has nutrient in it, it particularly is the reason grass, wood, weeds and watermelon have existed previously miracle strengthen grew to alter into into ever made, soil comes from decaying organic and organic and organic and organic plant fabric, as at as quickly as because of the fact the plant dies it is existence rigidity, is rendered back into the soil and absorbed by utilising utilising the subsequent plant to return alongside, flora stay of of three significant chemical components and hundreds of lesser sub chemical components, mirical strengthen synthesizes those chems and components the flora an abundance of them (some circumstances slightly plenty). to boot, you do no longer might desire to fertilize all that frequently, as at as quickly as as a month is intense-high quality so it is in assessment to you're utilising that plenty and MG is a shrink end nutrient which provides you "suitable" outcomes, there are countless companies that make particularly intense priced and extremely effective nutrients, flora nova as an occasion expenditures $40 a quart, an spectacular medium is fox farm type, in case you %. exotics, be careful with how plenty you observe, they are mushy.

2016-12-08 22:02:45 · answer #3 · answered by bornhoft 4 · 0 0

How about the Sweet Pea perennial? They have pretty flowers in a variety of colors and smell nice, too!

2006-06-17 15:53:41 · answer #4 · answered by Lynell S 3 · 0 0

English ivy is attractive as a backround for the flower bed. Or try clematis. It blooms all summer long, profusely. When planting it, this one likes sun, but its lower region where planted shaded. So you would put some other plant in front of it to shade its roots.

2006-06-17 06:21:32 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Snow In Summer is a perennial, it is beautiful and will grow any place. Has beautiful white flowers grows all summer. And will grow anywhere.

2006-06-17 14:41:45 · answer #6 · answered by lala 3 · 0 0

A Jasmine creeper.

2006-06-18 00:10:39 · answer #7 · answered by jammer 6 · 0 0

Morning glory vines, cardinal creeper, and sweet potato vines have all treated me well. They all grow pretty vigorously and would fill in the area quickly.

2006-06-17 06:38:32 · answer #8 · answered by Janiepoo 5 · 0 0

i think for climbing the wall the best which i have in my garden is 'bouegenvillia'.and if u live in the place which is mainly desert like dubai or [arizona usa]u should put fertillizer in it in every 2 months. put water daily in it .

2006-06-17 10:47:43 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Jasmine Ivy will defintely be the choice.

2006-06-17 06:13:10 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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