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Japanese Honeysuckle - Halliana
It has whitish-yellow flowers with a delightful fragrance. Be aware that is can be quite invasive. It is also a reliable, fragrant evergreen vine for a shade arbor. Honeysuckle can be cut nearly to the ground in late winter/early spring when it becomes too big; new shoots emerge and growth resumes in the spring. Capable of covering huge amounts of space in a short time, this vine makes a great ground cover on banks and slopes for erosion control. Excellent for screening or to drape over an unsightly wall or wood fence. It produces rampant growth capable of engulfing wire or chain-link fences in just a couple of seasons. Honeysuckle enjoys the full sun, but grows and flowers well in partial shade. When used as a ground cover, they are about 2 feet tall. Hall's Honeysuckles are a very fast growing plant to 15 to 30 feet. Japanese Honeysuckle 'Halliana', Lonicera japonica 'Halliana', is the most commonly seen Honeysuckle and is also known as Hall's Honeysuckle. A country-garden standby often trained onto dilapidated outbuildings or into the branches of dead trees. ... additional information
Ivy - Riterkreuz The wide range of varieties now available give colour and form all the year round. Hederas are one of the most useful group of plants for the garden that we have. The small, glossy, dark green leaves have five-to-seven pointed lobes, often with little side branches that resemble a Maltese cross. The Riterkreuz Ivy, Hedera Helix, is a fairly vigorous Ivy with a trailing, self-branching habit. |
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