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#1
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Scented Climber
I have a small south facing wall (its my shed) its very sheltered and only gets full sun in the middle part of the day, next to it is my compost bin.
I would like to grow a scented climber to disguise any smells that the bin may make and be attaractive etc. I was going to choose jasmine (officinale) but it seems it very hard to grow. Any suggestions or advice? Cheers |
#2
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"gasdoctor" wrote in message ... : : I have a small south facing wall (its my shed) its very sheltered and : only gets full sun in the middle part of the day, next to it is my : compost bin. : I would like to grow a scented climber to disguise any smells that the : bin may make and be attaractive etc. : I was going to choose jasmine (officinale) but it seems it very hard to : grow. : : Any suggestions or advice? : : Cheers : What about honeysuckle? : gasdoctor |
#3
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"gasdoctor" wrote in message ... I have a small south facing wall (its my shed) its very sheltered and only gets full sun in the middle part of the day, next to it is my compost bin. I would like to grow a scented climber to disguise any smells that the bin may make and be attaractive etc. I was going to choose jasmine (officinale) but it seems it very hard to grow. Any suggestions or advice? Cheers -- gasdoctor Jasmine is not hard to grow but it can sometimes be hard to get it to flower, try an ordinary honeysuckle, Lonicera periclymenum, the variety Sweet Sue is a nice compact and bushy plant. However I suspect you won't need either as your compost heap shouldn't smell :~) -- Charlie, gardening in Cornwall. http://www.roselandhouse.co.uk Holders of National Plant Collection of Clematis viticella (cvs) |
#4
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"gasdoctor" wrote in message ... I have a small south facing wall (its my shed) its very sheltered and only gets full sun in the middle part of the day, next to it is my compost bin. I would like to grow a scented climber to disguise any smells that the bin may make and be attaractive etc. I was going to choose jasmine (officinale) but it seems it very hard to grow. Any suggestions or advice? Cheers -- gasdoctor Honeysuckle is surprisingly easy to grow, pretty, and the smell is pure bliss. |
#5
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In article , Charlie
Pridham writes Jasmine is not hard to grow but it can sometimes be hard to get it to flower, try an ordinary honeysuckle, Lonicera periclymenum, the variety Sweet Sue is a nice compact and bushy plant. However I suspect you won't need either as your compost heap shouldn't smell :~) Charlie, I have three jasmine's , officinale, stephanese and a variegated one. They all flower and are scented though you really can't trim them or prune them in anyway without a loss of flower! The variegated one has such pretty leaves that actually it's acceptable without flowers The main thing that I find difficult ids that unless it's grown over an arch or pergola the growth is very upright and it has to be fairly rigorously tied back or it goes berserk! The scent from officinale is very strong though some visitors actually don't like the smell. The stephanese and the variegated plant aren't quite so scented. Thinking of taking two of mine out (the ones against the walls) and replacing with clematis ! -- Janet Tweedy Dalmatian Telegraph http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk |
#6
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"Janet Tweedy" wrote in message ... In article , Charlie Pridham writes Jasmine is not hard to grow but it can sometimes be hard to get it to flower, try an ordinary honeysuckle, Lonicera periclymenum, the variety Sweet Sue is a nice compact and bushy plant. However I suspect you won't need either as your compost heap shouldn't smell :~) Charlie, I have three jasmine's , officinale, stephanese and a variegated one. They all flower and are scented though you really can't trim them or prune them in anyway without a loss of flower! The variegated one has such pretty leaves that actually it's acceptable without flowers The main thing that I find difficult ids that unless it's grown over an arch or pergola the growth is very upright and it has to be fairly rigorously tied back or it goes berserk! The scent from officinale is very strong though some visitors actually don't like the smell. The stephanese and the variegated plant aren't quite so scented. Thinking of taking two of mine out (the ones against the walls) and replacing with clematis ! -- Janet Tweedy Dalmatian Telegraph http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk Yes its the fighting for control, the constant cutting back that effects the flowering, my officinal 'Affine' flowers well as does stephanense but they certainly occupy their space (although I grow clematis in them so I shant be ripping them out just yet!) -- Charlie, gardening in Cornwall. http://www.roselandhouse.co.uk Holders of National Plant Collection of Clematis viticella (cvs) |
#7
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In article , "Charlie Pridham" writes: | | Yes its the fighting for control, the constant cutting back that effects the | flowering, my officinal 'Affine' flowers well as does stephanense but they | certainly occupy their space (although I grow clematis in them so I shant be | ripping them out just yet!) What sort of growth does J. officinale flower on? Too much pruning could have been my problem, so I should like to know how to do it. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#8
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Quote:
I always thought honeysuckle was extremely vigoruos. Honeysucle should be easy to find, though I did fancy something bit different. Cheers Ed |
#9
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"Nick Maclaren" wrote in message ... In article , "Charlie Pridham" writes: | | Yes its the fighting for control, the constant cutting back that effects the | flowering, my officinal 'Affine' flowers well as does stephanense but they | certainly occupy their space (although I grow clematis in them so I shant be | ripping them out just yet!) What sort of growth does J. officinale flower on? Too much pruning could have been my problem, so I should like to know how to do it. Regards, Nick Maclaren. Well I made the classic mistake of planting officinal too close to a path! but this is what I do. I leave around 2' of new growth on each green stem in winter, I also remove completely some old brown wood lower down (otherwise there is a steady build up), but will admit the most flowers are nearly always on the bits that haven't needed cutting back! The stephanese flowers its socks off because it is over an arch and can be just left alone. -- Charlie, gardening in Cornwall. http://www.roselandhouse.co.uk Holders of National Plant Collection of Clematis viticella (cvs) |
#11
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Janet,
I've bought an jasmin officinale argenteovariegatum last year and when it flowered late june/july it was lovely, but the flowering period was quite short and someone correctly or incorrectly told me with regular feeding you can keep the flowring for the rest of the summer. Whats your view on this? is it a bit like greedy clemtais give a good bonmeal feed at start of season and then a tomato liquid feed every two weeks? thanks 4 your help! Matt Quote:
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#12
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In article , "Charlie Pridham" writes: | | Well I made the classic mistake of planting officinal too close to a path! | but this is what I do. I leave around 2' of new growth on each green stem in | winter, I also remove completely some old brown wood lower down (otherwise | there is a steady build up), but will admit the most flowers are nearly | always on the bits that haven't needed cutting back! Thanks. I will try that. Nick. |
#13
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In article , Tiger303
writes Janet, I've bought an jasmin officinale argenteovariegatum last year and when it flowered late june/july it was lovely, but the flowering period was quite short and someone correctly or incorrectly told me with regular feeding you can keep the flowring for the rest of the summer. Whats your view on this? is it a bit like greedy clemtais give a good bonmeal feed at start of season and then a tomato liquid feed every two weeks? thanks 4 your help! Matt Well feeding helps but only on the amount of growth etc. The flowers won't last any longer though mine last at least a few weeks so not sure whether you think that's short or not. You could combine it with another climber but generally jasmine is quite twiggy and getting anything else in amongst the growth would be tricky! Stephanese is much more lax but mine doesn't have the same impact as the officinale mainly because the perfume from the officinale knocks your socks off from about 50 feet away. Janet -- Janet Tweedy Dalmatian Telegraph http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk |
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