
#ryland grace#phm#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers


seen from Taiwan
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from China
seen from Yemen
seen from China

seen from France

seen from Belgium
seen from Belgium

seen from Netherlands

seen from France
seen from Bulgaria
seen from China
seen from Lithuania
seen from Dominican Republic
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from T1

seen from Australia
Both cultivars grow to the same height of about 10 feet, and both bloom first in early summer and again in early fall. 12. Madame Julia Correvon âMadame Julia Correvonâ is a C. viticella cultivar with stunning, five-inch-wide maroon flowers with creamy white stamens. Part of Group 3, it blooms from early summer to early fall. And itâs such a reliable, profuse bloomer that it nabbed the Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit. Prune the 12-foot-long vines back to one foot above the ground in the early spring. 13. Piilu Get ready to meet one of the most stunning clematis vines out there. This âlittle ducklingâ is truly unlike anything else. The first flush of flowers, which appear on last yearâs wood, treats you to semi-double mauve-pink blooms with a bold maroon stripe down the center of each petal. At the center is a ruffle of medium purple petals. In the late summer, a second flush of blossoms emerges on the current yearâs growth. âPiiluâ Each is a single, pink blossom with a maroon line down the center. In a good year with the right conditions, there is hardly a break between the first and second flush. This plant stays fairly petite at just six feet tall, which makes it ideal for gardeners who want something that can shine fantastically in a container. Plants in nursery containers are available at Burpee. 14. Princess Diana If you didnât know better, you might think âPrincess Dianaâ was some kind of vining tulip plant, with bright raspberry and cream flowers covering eight-foot vines. The prominent seed heads are just an added bonus. Youâll sometimes see this cultivar labeled as âThe Princess of Wales,â but whatever itâs called, you can expect to see tulip-shaped blossoms on this Group 3 plant from late spring through the fall. âPrincess Dianaâ While any clematis can be grown as a ground cover, this one does particularly well because of its upright flowers and dense foliage. You can bring this princess home to your kingdom by heading to Nature Hills Nursery. 15. Princess Kate Highly distinctive with flaring, tulip-like flowers, Princess Kate (âZoprikaâ) has dramatically pointed, long petals of creamy pink with dark raspberry anthers and reverse coloring. Blooming steadily from July to September, this compact cultivar grows four to five feet long and makes a striking, trellised summer screen when massed or as a climber, floral ground cover, or tumbling from containers. Princess Kate Cut back vines to a strong set of healthy buds in late winter or early spring. Hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Bare root plants are available at Burpee. 16. Rouge Cardinal The petals on âRouge Cardinalâ are a striking, velvety, bold red that draws the eye wherever you put it. Add to that the fact that the flowers are seven inches across, and itâs a real statement piece, especially climbing up a trellis or obelisk. This Group 3 type starts blooming in midsummer and then pops up again in early fall. The first flush usually features double flowers and the second is a mix of double and single, but extremely profuse. 17. Sarah Elizabeth A delightfully sweet cultivar from the Compact Patio Clematis group of the BoulevardÂź series, Sarah Elizabethâą (C. âEvipo098â) sports impressive, candy pink flowers adorned with deep magenta anthers with a long bloom time of late spring to early autumn. An ideal choice for wall-side borders, trellised containers, small spaces, or as a spiller from planters and window boxes, the diminutive vines grow four to five feet tall and are hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Sarah Elizabeth Prune as for Group 3, cutting back all stems to a set of healthy buds in late winter or early spring. Plants in #1 containers are available at Nature Hills. 18. Sweet Autumn âSweet Autumnâ (C. terniflora) is the queen of the autumn clematis. This species has naturalized in many parts of the US, which should tell you how easy it is to grow. It also tells you that you might want to be careful about planting it in case your community has deemed it invasive. The 20-foot vines on this plant are absolutely covered in fragrant, petite white flowers from late summer until the first frost. âSweet Autumnâ If you want to prevent it from spreading all over the place, just give it a quick prune after flowering to cut down the seed heads. Or, leave them in place for the ornamental interest they provide. Vines in one-gallon containers are available at Nature Hills Nursery. 19. Sweet Summer Love She may sound like a sweetheart, but this plant is one tough cookie. If youâve ever tried to train a clematis vine only to snap the brittle wood, you know they can be a little bit fragile. The vines on âSweet Summer Loveâ are tough and resilient â but she has a soft side, too. The fragrance from the blossoms is unreal, heady enough to fill your yard with their sweet, delicate scent all summer and through the early fall. âSweet Summer Loveâ Oh yeah, and donât forget the maroon, nearly red flowers that gradually transition to deep purple over their lives. Plants in gallon-sized containers are available at Nature Hills Nursery. 20. Taiga This cultivar is no shrinking violet. The big, bold, flowers feature petals with a deep purple base and cream tips, all on an eight-foot-tall vine. Truly unlike any other clematis out there, the young flowers appear more purple as they first open, but as the unusual curved sepals start to unfold, the plant looks more and more creamy. And the flowers arenât the only stand-out feature. This type first blooms in the spring, followed by a second flush from late summer through fall. If the display seems less than impressive at any time, just trim the whole plant back a bit and youâll be treated to a new flush. âTaigaâ Intrigued? Itâs no surprise. âTaigaâ wowed attendees when it was introduced at the Chelsea Flower Show in 2017. Make it a part of your own flower show by picking up a one-and-a-half-gallon container at Plants By Mail. 21. Volunteer Another compact cultivar from the BoulevardÂź series, Volunteerâą (C. âEvipo080â) has delightful, star-shaped flowers of frosty pink with darker cerise bands and lemon yellow anthers. Flowering abundantly from early summer to early fall, the vines grow three to four feet, adding colorful charm spilling from containers, as a mounding groundcover, or small space climber on a mini trellis. Volunteer This Group 3 cultivar is pruned hard to healthy buds in late winter and is hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Plants in #1 containers can be purchased at Nature Hills Nursery. Amp Up Your Autumn Display with Fall-Blooming Clematis Thereâs nothing more attractive than an arbor or fence smothered in blossoms, except maybe one smothered in blossoms during the fall when so many other plants have already lost their sparkle. Fall-blooming clematis put on a show thatâs pretty hard to rival, and they do it when all those summer stunners are starting to go to sleep. Which one of these options is calling your name? Have you grown any of these top picks before? Let us know in the comment section below. If youâre enjoying the world of clematis plants and youâre interested in learning more about these classic garden vines, we have a few other guides that you might find useful. Check these out next: © Ask the Experts, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. See our TOS for more details. Originally published August 28, 2022. Last updated March 8, 2025. Product photos via Burpee, Home Depot, Nature Hills Nursery, Plants by Mail, and Walmart. Uncredited photos: Shutterstock. !function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s) if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function()n.callMethod? n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments); if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n;n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version='2.0'; n.queue=[];t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0; t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)(window, document,'script', ' fbq('init', '176410929431717'); fbq('track', 'PageView'); Source link
Both cultivars grow to the same height of about 10 feet, and both bloom first in early summer and again in early fall. 12. Madame Julia Correvon âMadame Julia Correvonâ is a C. viticella cultivar with stunning, five-inch-wide maroon flowers with creamy white stamens. Part of Group 3, it blooms from early summer to early fall. And itâs such a reliable, profuse bloomer that it nabbed the Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit. Prune the 12-foot-long vines back to one foot above the ground in the early spring. 13. Piilu Get ready to meet one of the most stunning clematis vines out there. This âlittle ducklingâ is truly unlike anything else. The first flush of flowers, which appear on last yearâs wood, treats you to semi-double mauve-pink blooms with a bold maroon stripe down the center of each petal. At the center is a ruffle of medium purple petals. In the late summer, a second flush of blossoms emerges on the current yearâs growth. âPiiluâ Each is a single, pink blossom with a maroon line down the center. In a good year with the right conditions, there is hardly a break between the first and second flush. This plant stays fairly petite at just six feet tall, which makes it ideal for gardeners who want something that can shine fantastically in a container. Plants in nursery containers are available at Burpee. 14. Princess Diana If you didnât know better, you might think âPrincess Dianaâ was some kind of vining tulip plant, with bright raspberry and cream flowers covering eight-foot vines. The prominent seed heads are just an added bonus. Youâll sometimes see this cultivar labeled as âThe Princess of Wales,â but whatever itâs called, you can expect to see tulip-shaped blossoms on this Group 3 plant from late spring through the fall. âPrincess Dianaâ While any clematis can be grown as a ground cover, this one does particularly well because of its upright flowers and dense foliage. You can bring this princess home to your kingdom by heading to Nature Hills Nursery. 15. Princess Kate Highly distinctive with flaring, tulip-like flowers, Princess Kate (âZoprikaâ) has dramatically pointed, long petals of creamy pink with dark raspberry anthers and reverse coloring. Blooming steadily from July to September, this compact cultivar grows four to five feet long and makes a striking, trellised summer screen when massed or as a climber, floral ground cover, or tumbling from containers. Princess Kate Cut back vines to a strong set of healthy buds in late winter or early spring. Hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Bare root plants are available at Burpee. 16. Rouge Cardinal The petals on âRouge Cardinalâ are a striking, velvety, bold red that draws the eye wherever you put it. Add to that the fact that the flowers are seven inches across, and itâs a real statement piece, especially climbing up a trellis or obelisk. This Group 3 type starts blooming in midsummer and then pops up again in early fall. The first flush usually features double flowers and the second is a mix of double and single, but extremely profuse. 17. Sarah Elizabeth A delightfully sweet cultivar from the Compact Patio Clematis group of the BoulevardÂź series, Sarah Elizabethâą (C. âEvipo098â) sports impressive, candy pink flowers adorned with deep magenta anthers with a long bloom time of late spring to early autumn. An ideal choice for wall-side borders, trellised containers, small spaces, or as a spiller from planters and window boxes, the diminutive vines grow four to five feet tall and are hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Sarah Elizabeth Prune as for Group 3, cutting back all stems to a set of healthy buds in late winter or early spring. Plants in #1 containers are available at Nature Hills. 18. Sweet Autumn âSweet Autumnâ (C. terniflora) is the queen of the autumn clematis. This species has naturalized in many parts of the US, which should tell you how easy it is to grow. It also tells you that you might want to be careful about planting it in case your community has deemed it invasive. The 20-foot vines on this plant are absolutely covered in fragrant, petite white flowers from late summer until the first frost. âSweet Autumnâ If you want to prevent it from spreading all over the place, just give it a quick prune after flowering to cut down the seed heads. Or, leave them in place for the ornamental interest they provide. Vines in one-gallon containers are available at Nature Hills Nursery. 19. Sweet Summer Love She may sound like a sweetheart, but this plant is one tough cookie. If youâve ever tried to train a clematis vine only to snap the brittle wood, you know they can be a little bit fragile. The vines on âSweet Summer Loveâ are tough and resilient â but she has a soft side, too. The fragrance from the blossoms is unreal, heady enough to fill your yard with their sweet, delicate scent all summer and through the early fall. âSweet Summer Loveâ Oh yeah, and donât forget the maroon, nearly red flowers that gradually transition to deep purple over their lives. Plants in gallon-sized containers are available at Nature Hills Nursery. 20. Taiga This cultivar is no shrinking violet. The big, bold, flowers feature petals with a deep purple base and cream tips, all on an eight-foot-tall vine. Truly unlike any other clematis out there, the young flowers appear more purple as they first open, but as the unusual curved sepals start to unfold, the plant looks more and more creamy. And the flowers arenât the only stand-out feature. This type first blooms in the spring, followed by a second flush from late summer through fall. If the display seems less than impressive at any time, just trim the whole plant back a bit and youâll be treated to a new flush. âTaigaâ Intrigued? Itâs no surprise. âTaigaâ wowed attendees when it was introduced at the Chelsea Flower Show in 2017. Make it a part of your own flower show by picking up a one-and-a-half-gallon container at Plants By Mail. 21. Volunteer Another compact cultivar from the BoulevardÂź series, Volunteerâą (C. âEvipo080â) has delightful, star-shaped flowers of frosty pink with darker cerise bands and lemon yellow anthers. Flowering abundantly from early summer to early fall, the vines grow three to four feet, adding colorful charm spilling from containers, as a mounding groundcover, or small space climber on a mini trellis. Volunteer This Group 3 cultivar is pruned hard to healthy buds in late winter and is hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Plants in #1 containers can be purchased at Nature Hills Nursery. Amp Up Your Autumn Display with Fall-Blooming Clematis Thereâs nothing more attractive than an arbor or fence smothered in blossoms, except maybe one smothered in blossoms during the fall when so many other plants have already lost their sparkle. Fall-blooming clematis put on a show thatâs pretty hard to rival, and they do it when all those summer stunners are starting to go to sleep. Which one of these options is calling your name? Have you grown any of these top picks before? Let us know in the comment section below. If youâre enjoying the world of clematis plants and youâre interested in learning more about these classic garden vines, we have a few other guides that you might find useful. Check these out next: © Ask the Experts, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. See our TOS for more details. Originally published August 28, 2022. Last updated March 8, 2025. Product photos via Burpee, Home Depot, Nature Hills Nursery, Plants by Mail, and Walmart. Uncredited photos: Shutterstock. !function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s) if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function()n.callMethod? n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments); if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n;n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version='2.0'; n.queue=[];t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0; t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)(window, document,'script', ' fbq('init', '176410929431717'); fbq('track', 'PageView'); Source link
Both cultivars grow to the same height of about 10 feet, and both bloom first in early summer and again in early fall. 12. Madame Julia Correvon âMadame Julia Correvonâ is a C. viticella cultivar with stunning, five-inch-wide maroon flowers with creamy white stamens. Part of Group 3, it blooms from early summer to early fall. And itâs such a reliable, profuse bloomer that it nabbed the Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit. Prune the 12-foot-long vines back to one foot above the ground in the early spring. 13. Piilu Get ready to meet one of the most stunning clematis vines out there. This âlittle ducklingâ is truly unlike anything else. The first flush of flowers, which appear on last yearâs wood, treats you to semi-double mauve-pink blooms with a bold maroon stripe down the center of each petal. At the center is a ruffle of medium purple petals. In the late summer, a second flush of blossoms emerges on the current yearâs growth. âPiiluâ Each is a single, pink blossom with a maroon line down the center. In a good year with the right conditions, there is hardly a break between the first and second flush. This plant stays fairly petite at just six feet tall, which makes it ideal for gardeners who want something that can shine fantastically in a container. Plants in nursery containers are available at Burpee. 14. Princess Diana If you didnât know better, you might think âPrincess Dianaâ was some kind of vining tulip plant, with bright raspberry and cream flowers covering eight-foot vines. The prominent seed heads are just an added bonus. Youâll sometimes see this cultivar labeled as âThe Princess of Wales,â but whatever itâs called, you can expect to see tulip-shaped blossoms on this Group 3 plant from late spring through the fall. âPrincess Dianaâ While any clematis can be grown as a ground cover, this one does particularly well because of its upright flowers and dense foliage. You can bring this princess home to your kingdom by heading to Nature Hills Nursery. 15. Princess Kate Highly distinctive with flaring, tulip-like flowers, Princess Kate (âZoprikaâ) has dramatically pointed, long petals of creamy pink with dark raspberry anthers and reverse coloring. Blooming steadily from July to September, this compact cultivar grows four to five feet long and makes a striking, trellised summer screen when massed or as a climber, floral ground cover, or tumbling from containers. Princess Kate Cut back vines to a strong set of healthy buds in late winter or early spring. Hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Bare root plants are available at Burpee. 16. Rouge Cardinal The petals on âRouge Cardinalâ are a striking, velvety, bold red that draws the eye wherever you put it. Add to that the fact that the flowers are seven inches across, and itâs a real statement piece, especially climbing up a trellis or obelisk. This Group 3 type starts blooming in midsummer and then pops up again in early fall. The first flush usually features double flowers and the second is a mix of double and single, but extremely profuse. 17. Sarah Elizabeth A delightfully sweet cultivar from the Compact Patio Clematis group of the BoulevardÂź series, Sarah Elizabethâą (C. âEvipo098â) sports impressive, candy pink flowers adorned with deep magenta anthers with a long bloom time of late spring to early autumn. An ideal choice for wall-side borders, trellised containers, small spaces, or as a spiller from planters and window boxes, the diminutive vines grow four to five feet tall and are hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Sarah Elizabeth Prune as for Group 3, cutting back all stems to a set of healthy buds in late winter or early spring. Plants in #1 containers are available at Nature Hills. 18. Sweet Autumn âSweet Autumnâ (C. terniflora) is the queen of the autumn clematis. This species has naturalized in many parts of the US, which should tell you how easy it is to grow. It also tells you that you might want to be careful about planting it in case your community has deemed it invasive. The 20-foot vines on this plant are absolutely covered in fragrant, petite white flowers from late summer until the first frost. âSweet Autumnâ If you want to prevent it from spreading all over the place, just give it a quick prune after flowering to cut down the seed heads. Or, leave them in place for the ornamental interest they provide. Vines in one-gallon containers are available at Nature Hills Nursery. 19. Sweet Summer Love She may sound like a sweetheart, but this plant is one tough cookie. If youâve ever tried to train a clematis vine only to snap the brittle wood, you know they can be a little bit fragile. The vines on âSweet Summer Loveâ are tough and resilient â but she has a soft side, too. The fragrance from the blossoms is unreal, heady enough to fill your yard with their sweet, delicate scent all summer and through the early fall. âSweet Summer Loveâ Oh yeah, and donât forget the maroon, nearly red flowers that gradually transition to deep purple over their lives. Plants in gallon-sized containers are available at Nature Hills Nursery. 20. Taiga This cultivar is no shrinking violet. The big, bold, flowers feature petals with a deep purple base and cream tips, all on an eight-foot-tall vine. Truly unlike any other clematis out there, the young flowers appear more purple as they first open, but as the unusual curved sepals start to unfold, the plant looks more and more creamy. And the flowers arenât the only stand-out feature. This type first blooms in the spring, followed by a second flush from late summer through fall. If the display seems less than impressive at any time, just trim the whole plant back a bit and youâll be treated to a new flush. âTaigaâ Intrigued? Itâs no surprise. âTaigaâ wowed attendees when it was introduced at the Chelsea Flower Show in 2017. Make it a part of your own flower show by picking up a one-and-a-half-gallon container at Plants By Mail. 21. Volunteer Another compact cultivar from the BoulevardÂź series, Volunteerâą (C. âEvipo080â) has delightful, star-shaped flowers of frosty pink with darker cerise bands and lemon yellow anthers. Flowering abundantly from early summer to early fall, the vines grow three to four feet, adding colorful charm spilling from containers, as a mounding groundcover, or small space climber on a mini trellis. Volunteer This Group 3 cultivar is pruned hard to healthy buds in late winter and is hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Plants in #1 containers can be purchased at Nature Hills Nursery. Amp Up Your Autumn Display with Fall-Blooming Clematis Thereâs nothing more attractive than an arbor or fence smothered in blossoms, except maybe one smothered in blossoms during the fall when so many other plants have already lost their sparkle. Fall-blooming clematis put on a show thatâs pretty hard to rival, and they do it when all those summer stunners are starting to go to sleep. Which one of these options is calling your name? Have you grown any of these top picks before? Let us know in the comment section below. If youâre enjoying the world of clematis plants and youâre interested in learning more about these classic garden vines, we have a few other guides that you might find useful. Check these out next: © Ask the Experts, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. See our TOS for more details. Originally published August 28, 2022. Last updated March 8, 2025. Product photos via Burpee, Home Depot, Nature Hills Nursery, Plants by Mail, and Walmart. Uncredited photos: Shutterstock. !function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s) if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function()n.callMethod? n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments); if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n;n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version='2.0'; n.queue=[];t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0; t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)(window, document,'script', ' fbq('init', '176410929431717'); fbq('track', 'PageView'); Source link
Both cultivars grow to the same height of about 10 feet, and both bloom first in early summer and again in early fall. 12. Madame Julia Correvon âMadame Julia Correvonâ is a C. viticella cultivar with stunning, five-inch-wide maroon flowers with creamy white stamens. Part of Group 3, it blooms from early summer to early fall. And itâs such a reliable, profuse bloomer that it nabbed the Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit. Prune the 12-foot-long vines back to one foot above the ground in the early spring. 13. Piilu Get ready to meet one of the most stunning clematis vines out there. This âlittle ducklingâ is truly unlike anything else. The first flush of flowers, which appear on last yearâs wood, treats you to semi-double mauve-pink blooms with a bold maroon stripe down the center of each petal. At the center is a ruffle of medium purple petals. In the late summer, a second flush of blossoms emerges on the current yearâs growth. âPiiluâ Each is a single, pink blossom with a maroon line down the center. In a good year with the right conditions, there is hardly a break between the first and second flush. This plant stays fairly petite at just six feet tall, which makes it ideal for gardeners who want something that can shine fantastically in a container. Plants in nursery containers are available at Burpee. 14. Princess Diana If you didnât know better, you might think âPrincess Dianaâ was some kind of vining tulip plant, with bright raspberry and cream flowers covering eight-foot vines. The prominent seed heads are just an added bonus. Youâll sometimes see this cultivar labeled as âThe Princess of Wales,â but whatever itâs called, you can expect to see tulip-shaped blossoms on this Group 3 plant from late spring through the fall. âPrincess Dianaâ While any clematis can be grown as a ground cover, this one does particularly well because of its upright flowers and dense foliage. You can bring this princess home to your kingdom by heading to Nature Hills Nursery. 15. Princess Kate Highly distinctive with flaring, tulip-like flowers, Princess Kate (âZoprikaâ) has dramatically pointed, long petals of creamy pink with dark raspberry anthers and reverse coloring. Blooming steadily from July to September, this compact cultivar grows four to five feet long and makes a striking, trellised summer screen when massed or as a climber, floral ground cover, or tumbling from containers. Princess Kate Cut back vines to a strong set of healthy buds in late winter or early spring. Hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Bare root plants are available at Burpee. 16. Rouge Cardinal The petals on âRouge Cardinalâ are a striking, velvety, bold red that draws the eye wherever you put it. Add to that the fact that the flowers are seven inches across, and itâs a real statement piece, especially climbing up a trellis or obelisk. This Group 3 type starts blooming in midsummer and then pops up again in early fall. The first flush usually features double flowers and the second is a mix of double and single, but extremely profuse. 17. Sarah Elizabeth A delightfully sweet cultivar from the Compact Patio Clematis group of the BoulevardÂź series, Sarah Elizabethâą (C. âEvipo098â) sports impressive, candy pink flowers adorned with deep magenta anthers with a long bloom time of late spring to early autumn. An ideal choice for wall-side borders, trellised containers, small spaces, or as a spiller from planters and window boxes, the diminutive vines grow four to five feet tall and are hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Sarah Elizabeth Prune as for Group 3, cutting back all stems to a set of healthy buds in late winter or early spring. Plants in #1 containers are available at Nature Hills. 18. Sweet Autumn âSweet Autumnâ (C. terniflora) is the queen of the autumn clematis. This species has naturalized in many parts of the US, which should tell you how easy it is to grow. It also tells you that you might want to be careful about planting it in case your community has deemed it invasive. The 20-foot vines on this plant are absolutely covered in fragrant, petite white flowers from late summer until the first frost. âSweet Autumnâ If you want to prevent it from spreading all over the place, just give it a quick prune after flowering to cut down the seed heads. Or, leave them in place for the ornamental interest they provide. Vines in one-gallon containers are available at Nature Hills Nursery. 19. Sweet Summer Love She may sound like a sweetheart, but this plant is one tough cookie. If youâve ever tried to train a clematis vine only to snap the brittle wood, you know they can be a little bit fragile. The vines on âSweet Summer Loveâ are tough and resilient â but she has a soft side, too. The fragrance from the blossoms is unreal, heady enough to fill your yard with their sweet, delicate scent all summer and through the early fall. âSweet Summer Loveâ Oh yeah, and donât forget the maroon, nearly red flowers that gradually transition to deep purple over their lives. Plants in gallon-sized containers are available at Nature Hills Nursery. 20. Taiga This cultivar is no shrinking violet. The big, bold, flowers feature petals with a deep purple base and cream tips, all on an eight-foot-tall vine. Truly unlike any other clematis out there, the young flowers appear more purple as they first open, but as the unusual curved sepals start to unfold, the plant looks more and more creamy. And the flowers arenât the only stand-out feature. This type first blooms in the spring, followed by a second flush from late summer through fall. If the display seems less than impressive at any time, just trim the whole plant back a bit and youâll be treated to a new flush. âTaigaâ Intrigued? Itâs no surprise. âTaigaâ wowed attendees when it was introduced at the Chelsea Flower Show in 2017. Make it a part of your own flower show by picking up a one-and-a-half-gallon container at Plants By Mail. 21. Volunteer Another compact cultivar from the BoulevardÂź series, Volunteerâą (C. âEvipo080â) has delightful, star-shaped flowers of frosty pink with darker cerise bands and lemon yellow anthers. Flowering abundantly from early summer to early fall, the vines grow three to four feet, adding colorful charm spilling from containers, as a mounding groundcover, or small space climber on a mini trellis. Volunteer This Group 3 cultivar is pruned hard to healthy buds in late winter and is hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Plants in #1 containers can be purchased at Nature Hills Nursery. Amp Up Your Autumn Display with Fall-Blooming Clematis Thereâs nothing more attractive than an arbor or fence smothered in blossoms, except maybe one smothered in blossoms during the fall when so many other plants have already lost their sparkle. Fall-blooming clematis put on a show thatâs pretty hard to rival, and they do it when all those summer stunners are starting to go to sleep. Which one of these options is calling your name? Have you grown any of these top picks before? Let us know in the comment section below. If youâre enjoying the world of clematis plants and youâre interested in learning more about these classic garden vines, we have a few other guides that you might find useful. Check these out next: © Ask the Experts, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. See our TOS for more details. Originally published August 28, 2022. Last updated March 8, 2025. Product photos via Burpee, Home Depot, Nature Hills Nursery, Plants by Mail, and Walmart. Uncredited photos: Shutterstock. !function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s) if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function()n.callMethod? n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments); if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n;n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version='2.0'; n.queue=[];t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0; t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)(window, document,'script', ' fbq('init', '176410929431717'); fbq('track', 'PageView'); Source link
Both cultivars grow to the same height of about 10 feet, and both bloom first in early summer and again in early fall. 12. Madame Julia Correvon âMadame Julia Correvonâ is a C. viticella cultivar with stunning, five-inch-wide maroon flowers with creamy white stamens. Part of Group 3, it blooms from early summer to early fall. And itâs such a reliable, profuse bloomer that it nabbed the Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit. Prune the 12-foot-long vines back to one foot above the ground in the early spring. 13. Piilu Get ready to meet one of the most stunning clematis vines out there. This âlittle ducklingâ is truly unlike anything else. The first flush of flowers, which appear on last yearâs wood, treats you to semi-double mauve-pink blooms with a bold maroon stripe down the center of each petal. At the center is a ruffle of medium purple petals. In the late summer, a second flush of blossoms emerges on the current yearâs growth. âPiiluâ Each is a single, pink blossom with a maroon line down the center. In a good year with the right conditions, there is hardly a break between the first and second flush. This plant stays fairly petite at just six feet tall, which makes it ideal for gardeners who want something that can shine fantastically in a container. Plants in nursery containers are available at Burpee. 14. Princess Diana If you didnât know better, you might think âPrincess Dianaâ was some kind of vining tulip plant, with bright raspberry and cream flowers covering eight-foot vines. The prominent seed heads are just an added bonus. Youâll sometimes see this cultivar labeled as âThe Princess of Wales,â but whatever itâs called, you can expect to see tulip-shaped blossoms on this Group 3 plant from late spring through the fall. âPrincess Dianaâ While any clematis can be grown as a ground cover, this one does particularly well because of its upright flowers and dense foliage. You can bring this princess home to your kingdom by heading to Nature Hills Nursery. 15. Princess Kate Highly distinctive with flaring, tulip-like flowers, Princess Kate (âZoprikaâ) has dramatically pointed, long petals of creamy pink with dark raspberry anthers and reverse coloring. Blooming steadily from July to September, this compact cultivar grows four to five feet long and makes a striking, trellised summer screen when massed or as a climber, floral ground cover, or tumbling from containers. Princess Kate Cut back vines to a strong set of healthy buds in late winter or early spring. Hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Bare root plants are available at Burpee. 16. Rouge Cardinal The petals on âRouge Cardinalâ are a striking, velvety, bold red that draws the eye wherever you put it. Add to that the fact that the flowers are seven inches across, and itâs a real statement piece, especially climbing up a trellis or obelisk. This Group 3 type starts blooming in midsummer and then pops up again in early fall. The first flush usually features double flowers and the second is a mix of double and single, but extremely profuse. 17. Sarah Elizabeth A delightfully sweet cultivar from the Compact Patio Clematis group of the BoulevardÂź series, Sarah Elizabethâą (C. âEvipo098â) sports impressive, candy pink flowers adorned with deep magenta anthers with a long bloom time of late spring to early autumn. An ideal choice for wall-side borders, trellised containers, small spaces, or as a spiller from planters and window boxes, the diminutive vines grow four to five feet tall and are hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Sarah Elizabeth Prune as for Group 3, cutting back all stems to a set of healthy buds in late winter or early spring. Plants in #1 containers are available at Nature Hills. 18. Sweet Autumn âSweet Autumnâ (C. terniflora) is the queen of the autumn clematis. This species has naturalized in many parts of the US, which should tell you how easy it is to grow. It also tells you that you might want to be careful about planting it in case your community has deemed it invasive. The 20-foot vines on this plant are absolutely covered in fragrant, petite white flowers from late summer until the first frost. âSweet Autumnâ If you want to prevent it from spreading all over the place, just give it a quick prune after flowering to cut down the seed heads. Or, leave them in place for the ornamental interest they provide. Vines in one-gallon containers are available at Nature Hills Nursery. 19. Sweet Summer Love She may sound like a sweetheart, but this plant is one tough cookie. If youâve ever tried to train a clematis vine only to snap the brittle wood, you know they can be a little bit fragile. The vines on âSweet Summer Loveâ are tough and resilient â but she has a soft side, too. The fragrance from the blossoms is unreal, heady enough to fill your yard with their sweet, delicate scent all summer and through the early fall. âSweet Summer Loveâ Oh yeah, and donât forget the maroon, nearly red flowers that gradually transition to deep purple over their lives. Plants in gallon-sized containers are available at Nature Hills Nursery. 20. Taiga This cultivar is no shrinking violet. The big, bold, flowers feature petals with a deep purple base and cream tips, all on an eight-foot-tall vine. Truly unlike any other clematis out there, the young flowers appear more purple as they first open, but as the unusual curved sepals start to unfold, the plant looks more and more creamy. And the flowers arenât the only stand-out feature. This type first blooms in the spring, followed by a second flush from late summer through fall. If the display seems less than impressive at any time, just trim the whole plant back a bit and youâll be treated to a new flush. âTaigaâ Intrigued? Itâs no surprise. âTaigaâ wowed attendees when it was introduced at the Chelsea Flower Show in 2017. Make it a part of your own flower show by picking up a one-and-a-half-gallon container at Plants By Mail. 21. Volunteer Another compact cultivar from the BoulevardÂź series, Volunteerâą (C. âEvipo080â) has delightful, star-shaped flowers of frosty pink with darker cerise bands and lemon yellow anthers. Flowering abundantly from early summer to early fall, the vines grow three to four feet, adding colorful charm spilling from containers, as a mounding groundcover, or small space climber on a mini trellis. Volunteer This Group 3 cultivar is pruned hard to healthy buds in late winter and is hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Plants in #1 containers can be purchased at Nature Hills Nursery. Amp Up Your Autumn Display with Fall-Blooming Clematis Thereâs nothing more attractive than an arbor or fence smothered in blossoms, except maybe one smothered in blossoms during the fall when so many other plants have already lost their sparkle. Fall-blooming clematis put on a show thatâs pretty hard to rival, and they do it when all those summer stunners are starting to go to sleep. Which one of these options is calling your name? Have you grown any of these top picks before? Let us know in the comment section below. If youâre enjoying the world of clematis plants and youâre interested in learning more about these classic garden vines, we have a few other guides that you might find useful. Check these out next: © Ask the Experts, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. See our TOS for more details. Originally published August 28, 2022. Last updated March 8, 2025. Product photos via Burpee, Home Depot, Nature Hills Nursery, Plants by Mail, and Walmart. Uncredited photos: Shutterstock. !function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s) if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function()n.callMethod? n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments); if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n;n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version='2.0'; n.queue=[];t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0; t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)(window, document,'script', ' fbq('init', '176410929431717'); fbq('track', 'PageView'); Source link
Both cultivars grow to the same height of about 10 feet, and both bloom first in early summer and again in early fall. 12. Madame Julia Correvon âMadame Julia Correvonâ is a C. viticella cultivar with stunning, five-inch-wide maroon flowers with creamy white stamens. Part of Group 3, it blooms from early summer to early fall. And itâs such a reliable, profuse bloomer that it nabbed the Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit. Prune the 12-foot-long vines back to one foot above the ground in the early spring. 13. Piilu Get ready to meet one of the most stunning clematis vines out there. This âlittle ducklingâ is truly unlike anything else. The first flush of flowers, which appear on last yearâs wood, treats you to semi-double mauve-pink blooms with a bold maroon stripe down the center of each petal. At the center is a ruffle of medium purple petals. In the late summer, a second flush of blossoms emerges on the current yearâs growth. âPiiluâ Each is a single, pink blossom with a maroon line down the center. In a good year with the right conditions, there is hardly a break between the first and second flush. This plant stays fairly petite at just six feet tall, which makes it ideal for gardeners who want something that can shine fantastically in a container. Plants in nursery containers are available at Burpee. 14. Princess Diana If you didnât know better, you might think âPrincess Dianaâ was some kind of vining tulip plant, with bright raspberry and cream flowers covering eight-foot vines. The prominent seed heads are just an added bonus. Youâll sometimes see this cultivar labeled as âThe Princess of Wales,â but whatever itâs called, you can expect to see tulip-shaped blossoms on this Group 3 plant from late spring through the fall. âPrincess Dianaâ While any clematis can be grown as a ground cover, this one does particularly well because of its upright flowers and dense foliage. You can bring this princess home to your kingdom by heading to Nature Hills Nursery. 15. Princess Kate Highly distinctive with flaring, tulip-like flowers, Princess Kate (âZoprikaâ) has dramatically pointed, long petals of creamy pink with dark raspberry anthers and reverse coloring. Blooming steadily from July to September, this compact cultivar grows four to five feet long and makes a striking, trellised summer screen when massed or as a climber, floral ground cover, or tumbling from containers. Princess Kate Cut back vines to a strong set of healthy buds in late winter or early spring. Hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Bare root plants are available at Burpee. 16. Rouge Cardinal The petals on âRouge Cardinalâ are a striking, velvety, bold red that draws the eye wherever you put it. Add to that the fact that the flowers are seven inches across, and itâs a real statement piece, especially climbing up a trellis or obelisk. This Group 3 type starts blooming in midsummer and then pops up again in early fall. The first flush usually features double flowers and the second is a mix of double and single, but extremely profuse. 17. Sarah Elizabeth A delightfully sweet cultivar from the Compact Patio Clematis group of the BoulevardÂź series, Sarah Elizabethâą (C. âEvipo098â) sports impressive, candy pink flowers adorned with deep magenta anthers with a long bloom time of late spring to early autumn. An ideal choice for wall-side borders, trellised containers, small spaces, or as a spiller from planters and window boxes, the diminutive vines grow four to five feet tall and are hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Sarah Elizabeth Prune as for Group 3, cutting back all stems to a set of healthy buds in late winter or early spring. Plants in #1 containers are available at Nature Hills. 18. Sweet Autumn âSweet Autumnâ (C. terniflora) is the queen of the autumn clematis. This species has naturalized in many parts of the US, which should tell you how easy it is to grow. It also tells you that you might want to be careful about planting it in case your community has deemed it invasive. The 20-foot vines on this plant are absolutely covered in fragrant, petite white flowers from late summer until the first frost. âSweet Autumnâ If you want to prevent it from spreading all over the place, just give it a quick prune after flowering to cut down the seed heads. Or, leave them in place for the ornamental interest they provide. Vines in one-gallon containers are available at Nature Hills Nursery. 19. Sweet Summer Love She may sound like a sweetheart, but this plant is one tough cookie. If youâve ever tried to train a clematis vine only to snap the brittle wood, you know they can be a little bit fragile. The vines on âSweet Summer Loveâ are tough and resilient â but she has a soft side, too. The fragrance from the blossoms is unreal, heady enough to fill your yard with their sweet, delicate scent all summer and through the early fall. âSweet Summer Loveâ Oh yeah, and donât forget the maroon, nearly red flowers that gradually transition to deep purple over their lives. Plants in gallon-sized containers are available at Nature Hills Nursery. 20. Taiga This cultivar is no shrinking violet. The big, bold, flowers feature petals with a deep purple base and cream tips, all on an eight-foot-tall vine. Truly unlike any other clematis out there, the young flowers appear more purple as they first open, but as the unusual curved sepals start to unfold, the plant looks more and more creamy. And the flowers arenât the only stand-out feature. This type first blooms in the spring, followed by a second flush from late summer through fall. If the display seems less than impressive at any time, just trim the whole plant back a bit and youâll be treated to a new flush. âTaigaâ Intrigued? Itâs no surprise. âTaigaâ wowed attendees when it was introduced at the Chelsea Flower Show in 2017. Make it a part of your own flower show by picking up a one-and-a-half-gallon container at Plants By Mail. 21. Volunteer Another compact cultivar from the BoulevardÂź series, Volunteerâą (C. âEvipo080â) has delightful, star-shaped flowers of frosty pink with darker cerise bands and lemon yellow anthers. Flowering abundantly from early summer to early fall, the vines grow three to four feet, adding colorful charm spilling from containers, as a mounding groundcover, or small space climber on a mini trellis. Volunteer This Group 3 cultivar is pruned hard to healthy buds in late winter and is hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Plants in #1 containers can be purchased at Nature Hills Nursery. Amp Up Your Autumn Display with Fall-Blooming Clematis Thereâs nothing more attractive than an arbor or fence smothered in blossoms, except maybe one smothered in blossoms during the fall when so many other plants have already lost their sparkle. Fall-blooming clematis put on a show thatâs pretty hard to rival, and they do it when all those summer stunners are starting to go to sleep. Which one of these options is calling your name? Have you grown any of these top picks before? Let us know in the comment section below. If youâre enjoying the world of clematis plants and youâre interested in learning more about these classic garden vines, we have a few other guides that you might find useful. Check these out next: © Ask the Experts, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. See our TOS for more details. Originally published August 28, 2022. Last updated March 8, 2025. Product photos via Burpee, Home Depot, Nature Hills Nursery, Plants by Mail, and Walmart. Uncredited photos: Shutterstock. !function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s) if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function()n.callMethod? n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments); if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n;n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version='2.0'; n.queue=[];t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0; t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)(window, document,'script', ' fbq('init', '176410929431717'); fbq('track', 'PageView'); Source link
Both cultivars grow to the same height of about 10 feet, and both bloom first in early summer and again in early fall. 12. Madame Julia Correvon âMadame Julia Correvonâ is a C. viticella cultivar with stunning, five-inch-wide maroon flowers with creamy white stamens. Part of Group 3, it blooms from early summer to early fall. And itâs such a reliable, profuse bloomer that it nabbed the Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit. Prune the 12-foot-long vines back to one foot above the ground in the early spring. 13. Piilu Get ready to meet one of the most stunning clematis vines out there. This âlittle ducklingâ is truly unlike anything else. The first flush of flowers, which appear on last yearâs wood, treats you to semi-double mauve-pink blooms with a bold maroon stripe down the center of each petal. At the center is a ruffle of medium purple petals. In the late summer, a second flush of blossoms emerges on the current yearâs growth. âPiiluâ Each is a single, pink blossom with a maroon line down the center. In a good year with the right conditions, there is hardly a break between the first and second flush. This plant stays fairly petite at just six feet tall, which makes it ideal for gardeners who want something that can shine fantastically in a container. Plants in nursery containers are available at Burpee. 14. Princess Diana If you didnât know better, you might think âPrincess Dianaâ was some kind of vining tulip plant, with bright raspberry and cream flowers covering eight-foot vines. The prominent seed heads are just an added bonus. Youâll sometimes see this cultivar labeled as âThe Princess of Wales,â but whatever itâs called, you can expect to see tulip-shaped blossoms on this Group 3 plant from late spring through the fall. âPrincess Dianaâ While any clematis can be grown as a ground cover, this one does particularly well because of its upright flowers and dense foliage. You can bring this princess home to your kingdom by heading to Nature Hills Nursery. 15. Princess Kate Highly distinctive with flaring, tulip-like flowers, Princess Kate (âZoprikaâ) has dramatically pointed, long petals of creamy pink with dark raspberry anthers and reverse coloring. Blooming steadily from July to September, this compact cultivar grows four to five feet long and makes a striking, trellised summer screen when massed or as a climber, floral ground cover, or tumbling from containers. Princess Kate Cut back vines to a strong set of healthy buds in late winter or early spring. Hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Bare root plants are available at Burpee. 16. Rouge Cardinal The petals on âRouge Cardinalâ are a striking, velvety, bold red that draws the eye wherever you put it. Add to that the fact that the flowers are seven inches across, and itâs a real statement piece, especially climbing up a trellis or obelisk. This Group 3 type starts blooming in midsummer and then pops up again in early fall. The first flush usually features double flowers and the second is a mix of double and single, but extremely profuse. 17. Sarah Elizabeth A delightfully sweet cultivar from the Compact Patio Clematis group of the BoulevardÂź series, Sarah Elizabethâą (C. âEvipo098â) sports impressive, candy pink flowers adorned with deep magenta anthers with a long bloom time of late spring to early autumn. An ideal choice for wall-side borders, trellised containers, small spaces, or as a spiller from planters and window boxes, the diminutive vines grow four to five feet tall and are hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Sarah Elizabeth Prune as for Group 3, cutting back all stems to a set of healthy buds in late winter or early spring. Plants in #1 containers are available at Nature Hills. 18. Sweet Autumn âSweet Autumnâ (C. terniflora) is the queen of the autumn clematis. This species has naturalized in many parts of the US, which should tell you how easy it is to grow. It also tells you that you might want to be careful about planting it in case your community has deemed it invasive. The 20-foot vines on this plant are absolutely covered in fragrant, petite white flowers from late summer until the first frost. âSweet Autumnâ If you want to prevent it from spreading all over the place, just give it a quick prune after flowering to cut down the seed heads. Or, leave them in place for the ornamental interest they provide. Vines in one-gallon containers are available at Nature Hills Nursery. 19. Sweet Summer Love She may sound like a sweetheart, but this plant is one tough cookie. If youâve ever tried to train a clematis vine only to snap the brittle wood, you know they can be a little bit fragile. The vines on âSweet Summer Loveâ are tough and resilient â but she has a soft side, too. The fragrance from the blossoms is unreal, heady enough to fill your yard with their sweet, delicate scent all summer and through the early fall. âSweet Summer Loveâ Oh yeah, and donât forget the maroon, nearly red flowers that gradually transition to deep purple over their lives. Plants in gallon-sized containers are available at Nature Hills Nursery. 20. Taiga This cultivar is no shrinking violet. The big, bold, flowers feature petals with a deep purple base and cream tips, all on an eight-foot-tall vine. Truly unlike any other clematis out there, the young flowers appear more purple as they first open, but as the unusual curved sepals start to unfold, the plant looks more and more creamy. And the flowers arenât the only stand-out feature. This type first blooms in the spring, followed by a second flush from late summer through fall. If the display seems less than impressive at any time, just trim the whole plant back a bit and youâll be treated to a new flush. âTaigaâ Intrigued? Itâs no surprise. âTaigaâ wowed attendees when it was introduced at the Chelsea Flower Show in 2017. Make it a part of your own flower show by picking up a one-and-a-half-gallon container at Plants By Mail. 21. Volunteer Another compact cultivar from the BoulevardÂź series, Volunteerâą (C. âEvipo080â) has delightful, star-shaped flowers of frosty pink with darker cerise bands and lemon yellow anthers. Flowering abundantly from early summer to early fall, the vines grow three to four feet, adding colorful charm spilling from containers, as a mounding groundcover, or small space climber on a mini trellis. Volunteer This Group 3 cultivar is pruned hard to healthy buds in late winter and is hardy in Zones 4 to 9. Plants in #1 containers can be purchased at Nature Hills Nursery. Amp Up Your Autumn Display with Fall-Blooming Clematis Thereâs nothing more attractive than an arbor or fence smothered in blossoms, except maybe one smothered in blossoms during the fall when so many other plants have already lost their sparkle. Fall-blooming clematis put on a show thatâs pretty hard to rival, and they do it when all those summer stunners are starting to go to sleep. Which one of these options is calling your name? Have you grown any of these top picks before? Let us know in the comment section below. If youâre enjoying the world of clematis plants and youâre interested in learning more about these classic garden vines, we have a few other guides that you might find useful. Check these out next: © Ask the Experts, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. See our TOS for more details. Originally published August 28, 2022. Last updated March 8, 2025. Product photos via Burpee, Home Depot, Nature Hills Nursery, Plants by Mail, and Walmart. Uncredited photos: Shutterstock. !function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s) if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function()n.callMethod? n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments); if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n;n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version='2.0'; n.queue=[];t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0; t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)(window, document,'script', ' fbq('init', '176410929431717'); fbq('track', 'PageView'); Source link