Purple passion flower vine
Lindsay K
7 years ago
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Comments (6)
Lindsay K
7 years agoRelated Discussions
HAVE: Let's trade!
Comments (7)I have lots of beefsteak, roma, rutgers, lg red cherry toms, and some amish paste and vr moscow i would swap for flower seeds. i mostly trade for veggies but i have a friend who loves flowers so if your interested let me know. my name is randy and my email is jschoneck@yahoo.com i am interested in: Oleander, Dark Pink Bell Pepper, Yellow Cardinal Climber Vine Cleome - purple Cleome - white Dogwood Trees Four o'clocks - yellow Four o'clocks - pink/lavendar Four o'clocks - hot pink/red Gerber Daisy - yellow Marigold, variegated Morning glories - pink Morning glories - purple Passion Flower Vine Petunias, trailing - purple Petunias, trailing - white Rose Althea - pink Rose Althea - purple...See MoreNew seeds for trade!
Comments (4)what do you wont for the butterfly bush I have red cypress vine and I have white hyacinth bean vine seeds...See MoreUpdated trade list - Lots of seed for trade!
Comments (5)Hi, I had emailed once for maypops and a couple other things. I was about to walk out the door to go buy the stamps to send you, but wanted to check on here first lol. Glad i did! Could i also have some of your: * Cleome - "Cat's Whiskers" * Blue Indigo (baptisia australis) * Giant White Hibiscus - 3 packs left * Zinnia - semi dwarf pumila mixed colors Thank You! Jackie/STROBE turning_into_dust@yahoo.com...See MoreDoes anyone grow Passion Flower?
Comments (19)Wiley, I have plenty of little sprouts coming up from my lavender-flowered passiflora incarnata and would be happy to share a few bare-root shoots if I can find any more this late in the season (I just finished pulling & discarding a bunch, as I already have 4 potted and rooted for an upcoming local plant swap.) My plant was a gift sent bare-root from a fellow gardener in the southeastern U.S., where these plants are native, up to Virginia and southeastern Pennsylvania. It is perfectly winter-hardy without protection other than the usual winter mulch of shredded leaves in my USDA Zone 7 garden on the mid-NJ coast. Don't despair if you don't see anything in spring - these didn't earn their name "Maypop" for nothing! Due to our cooler spring this year, mine was up quite late, but has made up for it. I don't know how well it would fare through a zone 6 winter, but it wouldn't hurt to try. I would recommend planting it in a large, deep nursery pot sunk into the ground, as once established they do send up shoots quite a distance from the mother plant. Let me know if you are still interested - there should still be time for it to establish some roots before the soil cools....See MoreLindsay K
7 years agolast modified: 7 years agoLindsay K
7 years ago
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