Description: Orange Trumpet Vine is a much-loved woody climbing vine native to eastern North America. It produces large (3-5 inch) trumpet-like flowers beloved by hummingbirds and other pollinators (that's right: hummingbirds are pollinators). Trumpet vine follows up its flowers with long pods full of paper-thin seeds that flutter to the ground once the pods open up. Plants can take over a tree, or a building, or a fence, so best to plant these with intention. It can be trained into very effective and attractive ground-cover. Also said to have some medicinal uses (the root is considered diaphoretic — makes one sweat — and vulnerary — wound-healing). Despite a somewhat appetizing look, the whole plant should be considered poisonous and not ingested.A high-climbing, aggressively colonizing woody vine to 35 ft., climbing or scrambling over everything in its path by aerial rootlets. The pinnately compound leaves up to 12 inches long, with typically 3 to 6 pairs of leaflets and a single terminal one. Leaflets dark green on the upper surface, lighter on the lower, broadly to narrowly ovate, with coarse teeth, an elongate tip, and a rounded to wedge shaped base, the blade extending along the petiolule (leaflet stem) to its base. Flowers showy, waxy, broadly trumpet shaped, up to 3 1/2 inches long, orange to reddish orange and occasionally yellow, clustered at the ends of branches, appearing throughout the summer. Fruit a capsule up to 7 inches long with two dehiscent suture ridges running lengthwise, tapering more gradually to the base than to the tip, and roughly round in cross section.No shipping to AK, HI Native to eastern North America as far north as Ohio and South Dakota, this vine is often cultivated for its attractive, reddish orange flowers and can escape cultivation, sometimes colonizing so densely it seems a nuisance, particularly in the southeast, where its aggressive habit have earned it the names Hellvine and Devil's Shoestring. Its rapid colonization by suckers and layering makes it useful for erosion control, however, and its magnificent flowers never fail to attract Ruby-throated Hummingbirds within its range. Adapted to eastern forests, Trumpet creeper grows tall with support. It climbs by means of aerial rootlets, which, like English Ivy, can damage wood, stone, and brick. To keep it in check, plant it near concrete or an area that you can mow; mowing down the suckers will discourage them. Fairly drought tolerant within its range. Blooms most in full sun
Price: 13.95 USD
Location: McMinnville, Tennessee
End Time: 2024-11-25T19:58:36.000Z
Shipping Cost: N/A USD
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Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Climate: Humid Continental, Humid Subtropical, Mediterranean, zones 4 - 9, Marine West Coast, Semiarid, Highland
Common Name: Trumpet Vine
Indoor/Outdoor: Outdoor
Color: Orange
Growth Habit: Climbing
MPN: none
Brand: Unbranded
Season of Interest: Fall, Summer
Life Cycle: Perennial
Type: Vine Seeds
Watering: Medium
Genus: Campsis radicans
Sunlight: Full Sun
Features: Deciduous, Fast Growing, Flowering
Cultivating Difficulty: Easy
Country/Region of Manufacture: America
Available Variations
Color: 6-12''
Price: 13.95 USD
Available Quantity: 50
Quantity Sold: 0
Color: 12-18''
Price: 16.95 USD
Available Quantity: 50
Quantity Sold: 0