S.Marczynski W.Piotrowski Clematis - SOURCE OF GOOD VINES Zwiazek Szkółkarzy Polskich Nursery is the member of
Polish Nurserymen Association

Polska wersja
 witamy!
Русская версия
 здесь!

Clematis Forum
  wholesale offer our nursery welcome! vines in garden encyclopaedia forum links contact  
  growing Clematis   other plants   articles   applications of climbers
   varieties
   combined table
   requirements
   training
   applications
   planting
   maintenance
   pruning
   diseases
   pests
   frost hardiness
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   Actinidia
   Akebia
   Ampelopsis
   Aristolochia durior
   Calystegia hederacea
   Campsis
   Celastrus orb.
   Cocculus orb.
   Fallopia aubertii
   Hedera helix
   Humulus lupulus
   Hydrangea
   Lonicera
   Menispermum
   Parthenocissus
   Periploca graeca
   Schisandra chinensis
   Schizophragma
   Vincetoxicum nigrum
   Vitis
   Wisteria
   Ground covers
 
 
 
 
 
   Five-leaf akebia
   Ivy (Hedera helix)
   Magnolia vine
   Oriental Bittersweet
   Climbing Hydrangea
   Clematis alpina
   Clematis ‘Bill MacKenzie’
   Clematis 'Emilia Plater'
   Clematis florida
   Clematis Integrifolia Group
   Clematis ‘Praecox’
   Clematis Texensis Group
   Clematis Viticella Group
   Franczak and his clematis
   Polish C. names explained
   Clematis for beginners list
   Clematis in hot climates
   Dutchman's pipe
   Moonseed
   Trumpet creeper
   Sweet potato
   Japanese Hydrangea vine
   Honeysuckle
   Ampelopsis
   Yellow-leafed hop
   Buying climbers
   Pruning climbers
   on walls, arbors and pergolas
   on fences and as screeners
   over natural supports, as ground cover
   in containers, on balconies and terraces
   Clematis for cut flowers
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
you are here: vines in garden > articles about vines (including Clematis) > growing clematis in hot climates


Growing clematis in hot climates
by Lyndy Broder

Many clematis can be grown successfully in hot climates. There are also some clematis that would rather be grown in cooler environments. As an amateur gardener I will share what I have learned over the past decade. I garden in the Deep South of the United States at the 33-degree latitude, the same as Northern Africa, Baghdad and Shangai. Clematis has the reputation of being difficult to grow in hot climates. I have a large garden in which only the strong survive. None of my clematis gets any special attention. The most important factor, as with any plant is proper soil preparation and placement. I also have very heavy acid red clay soil. The addition of copious amounts of organic material is essential. I also add varying amounts of a gritty product made from expanded shale to enhance appropriate drainage.

The heat, especially our hot nights, has a significant impact on which clematis can be successfully grown. When I first started to grow the atragenes (alpina and macropetala), they would do fine the first year. I was lucky if they came back the second year and none have survived into a third year. I was told that the reason they would not flourish in Atlanta was because we did not have enough cold dormancy. Our winters in Atlanta are slightly colder than they are in Portland, Oregon where atragenes do quite well. However, our summers are drastically different. 86°F ( 30°C) is the point at which plants begin suffering physiological damage from heat. The American Horticultural Society web site states: "Plant death from heat is slow and lingering. The plant may survive in a stunted or chloratic state for several years. When desiccation reaches a high enough level, the enzymes that control growth are deactivated and the plant dies." Atlanta has 90 to 120 days where the temperature is greater than 86° F while Portland has only 14 to 30 days, which are this hot.

In the heat the hues of some clematis are not as vibrant as you see in the books when the pictures were taken in the cooler climates of England or on the web pages from Poland. Color pigments are protein that breaks down in heat. I have found that reds tend to be more vibrant in extreme heat. Perhaps the species red texensis from Texas, which is used in the breeding of many reds, is a more stable color in heat.

Despite these challenges many clematis thrive in hot climates. Those listed have flourished in my garden for a number of years. The asterisk indicates that the clematis has been listed on the International Clematis Society list of Clematis for Beginners, which can be viewed in its entirety at www.clematisinternational.com.

Clematis for the heat

Clematis that grow satisfactorily in the heat

Clematis, which do not do in the heat well for me

* International Clematis Society List of Clematis for Beginners

I recommend that you research these clematis using the encyclopedia section of this web site. Some are fragrant. These clematis have a variety of growing habits from sprawling small vines to large aggressive climbers. If you have a long growing season like I do, you should add six weeks to the beginning of the bloom times as they will bloom much earlier for you. Some will rest in the heat of the summer and then bloom again in the autumn when the nights get cooler. The clematis may get brown crunchy leaves during the hottest part of the season. This is environmental and is not caused by disease. The clematis will put out fresh leaves when it gets cooler. You may prune them back after the first flush of blooms on some varieties. You can enjoy clematis blooming twelve months of the year. Beware, clematis can be addicting.

March 23, 2006

ph art for the heat Arabella
Clematis 'Arabella'

ph art for the heat Betty Corning
Clematis 'Betty Corning'

ph art for the heat Duchess of Albany
Clematis 'Duchess of Albany'

ph art for the heat Etoile Violette
Clematis 'Etoile Violette'

ph art for the heat Pangbourne Pink
Clematis 'Pangbourne Pink'

ph art for the heat Romantika
Clematis 'Romantika'

ph art for the heat terniflora
Clematis terniflora

ph art for the heat triternata rubromarginata
Clematis x triternata 'Rubromarginata'

ph art for the heat Violamay
Clematis 'Viola'

ph art for the heat Westerplatte
Clematis 'Westerplatte'


see also:
• Akebia quinata
• care and culture of Clematis
• Clematis 'Emilia Plater' (Viticella Group)
• Clematis ‘Praecox’ from the Heracleifolia Group
• Clematis alpina and cultivars from the Atragene Group
• Clematis florida and its cultivars
• Clematis for beginners list
• Clematis Integrifolia Group
• Clematis Viticella Group
• Climbing Hydrangea (Hydrangea anomala subsp. petiolaris)
• encyclopaedia
• forum on clematis care and culture
• Ivy (Hedera helix)
• Magnolia vine (Schisandra chinensis)
• Oriental Bittersweet (Celastrus)

 
print version
printer version...
 
vines in garden > articles about vines (including Clematis) > growing clematis in hot climates
Last modification: 2008-02-29 09:56:54.
Design and realization of the pages: Grzegorz Marczyński. Website is managed by WMS.
© 1999-2008 Szczepan Marczyński - All Rights Reserved - Copying of pictures and text prohibited.