Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Sweet Autumn Clematis


I have enjoyed this plant this week.

A good article follows.

Fall is a wonderful season in the garden, partly because we are relieved and a bit surprised anything has survived the overbearing heat of summer. Mostly it is a season of reds and oranges from the changing foliage, with an occasional goldenrod or aster sprinkled about to add contrast to the autumnal scene. But each September when virgin's bower blooms, I'm always startled by the purity of its white blossoms after the travails of a difficult summer.

Virgin's bower or sweet autumn clematis, Clematis terniflora, is a Japanese vine found scattered here and there in Arkansas along roadways or in gardens where it provides late season color. Our wild equivalent, Clematis virginiana -- also called virgin's bower -- is similar but with serrate, deciduous leaves, smaller flowers and a distinctively different seed head.

Virgin's bower belongs to the Ranunculus family and is, or so it seems to me, learning to be a vine. It has compound, three-parted, entire, gloss, dark green leaves on slender stems. Climbing is by a combination of sprawling and twisting the petioles of the leaves around nearby supports.

In late summer and fall plants produce masses of inch-wide, 4-sepaled blossoms with a number of slender stamens nested in the center of each flower. The fragrant flowers provide a hint of jasmine and are produced in units of three, giving rise to the species name. When in full bloom, the entire plant will be cloaked in a mantle of white. A bower is a garden shelter made from twining vines.

As the flowers fade, they are replaced by a cluster of solitary seeds, each bearing a long fuzzy tail that adds another aspect of beauty to the plant. These seed head clusters are the size of a golf ball.

Virgin's bower masquerades under at least four Latin names with C. paniculata being the most commonly used for the introduced species. Dr. Ed Smith, in his taxonomic atlas of Arkansas plants, uses the name C. terniflora, and shows it growing wild throughout the state.

Though this is an introduced plant and is occasionally seen sprawling on the top of a barbed wire fence, it lacks the competitive spirit of a Japanese honeysuckle or a kudzu. But in the garden, it needs some tending or it can overrun its neighbors. Because it is fall flowering, it can be cut back hard each spring and will bloom in the fall.

It grows best in reasonably good, bottomland soils where the roots are allowed to intermingle with other plants, but the top is in the sun. It can be trained to a trellis or allowed to sprawl on a fence, wall or shrub. A friend told me her virgin's bower reseeded freely in her garden, but I've watched a wild stand in Fayetteville for 30 years and see no sign of it spreading by seed. Probably it needs bare ground if it is going to spread this way.

As an experiment, I plan to plant virgin's bower under the skirt of my forsythia bush. If this works, and I see no reason it won't, the yellow forsythia blooms should give good display in the spring and then have a nice crop of white blooms come fall. This kind of horticultural double-cropping will allow me to maximize my display in the few sunny areas in my garden.

By: Gerald Klingaman, retired
Extension Horticulturist - Ornamentals
Extension News - September 30, 2005

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Needed Rains Falls

Sunday afternoon August 1st 45/100 of an inch of rain fell on the dry earth at our house.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Walnut Caterpillars


FYI - Over the past couple days while on a north TX trip I received a few calls concerning a major outbreak of walnut caterpillars in DeWitt county. This insect has a tremendous appetite and if enough colonies are in a tree, they can literally strip the foliage of a tree in a few days. Walnut caterpillars feed in colonies and do not construct webs. When they molt they will molt in a group, usually on the trunk or a main scaffold limb. I have attached a picture of a small colony on a pecan branch to help you ID the insect. If anyone sees or hears about this in your county I would like to hear about it so we can determine the range of the out break.
Thank you for your assistance.
Bill
Bill Ree
Extension Program Specialist II - IPM (Pecan)
P.O. Box 2150
Bryan, TX 77806-2150
Ph: 979-845-6800
Fax: 979-845-6501

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Dewberries


Picked about a gallon of berries today.

Friday, February 29, 2008

Violets Blooming

For about 10 days I have been enjoying wild violet blooms during walks in the woods.
More can be learned about these wild violets at: http://www.wildflower.org/plants/result.php?id_plant=VIBI

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Before Sunrise

Before sunrise, thunder and lightning was again heard on our hill. The rain gage only showed 1/20 of an inch. There were clouds here last night. I didn't get to see the eclipse.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

This day started with thunder and lightning. 1.7 inches of rain fell today. It was not at all like the rain we got when this photo was taken. That day only one side of the tree got wet.

Monday, February 11, 2008

First Verbena Blooms Noted

This is the first week this spring I have noted verbena blooming in our woods.

Sunday, February 3, 2008

Verbena

In early spring I often fine verbena blooming in the woods. Their blooms are nice, but not as nice as this garden variety.

Thursday, January 31, 2008

This was at a friend's.

As a child I knew it as maypop.

Passionflower seems to be the more used common name.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

The rest of the story.

My wife found the surprise first. Oh yes, she called to share it with me.

Life has surprises. Found this one in April of 2006.