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GREEN DRAPERIES
— John Sedding. VINES are the
draperies of the garden, and as much thought should be given to their
choice and bestowal as to the hangings of a room. The wrong vine may
mar an otherwise pleasant scene, and the right one will frequently
quite redeem the commonplace. Architectural indiscretions and
enormities may be buried and forgotten beneath a heavy covering of
vines, and many a crude and unsightly object brought into harmony with
its surroundings through the kindly tact of some gracious climbing
plant. No need to emphasize the charm of vine-clad arbours and porches,
of green-draped walls and gateways, which do so much toward giving to
our gardens the appearance of permanence and livableness so much
desired. But perhaps it is a little needful to speak of the fact that
the chief factor in this charm is luxuriance,
which may not be had without generous preparation of
the spot the vine is to occupy. Nearly all climbing
plants require a rich soil to support the great top growth, and a deep
and wide hole, well manured, should be prepared for their reception.
Yearly enrichment should be given, and frequent cultivation of the soil
around the vine will insure a freer growth. It is the part of wisdom to
start the training of young climbing plants at a very tender age, for
once let them have their own way for a season, and much cruel
mutilation is necessary to bring them back to the paths of decorum. In
many a situation, however, the vine may be allowed its own sweet will,
and sweet indeed it is, when one observes the delightful manner in
which Nature hangs her festoons of Virginia creeper, Woodbine,
Bittersweet, and Clematis over stumps and fences, dead trees, and rocky
hillsides; but when some special object is to be covered, no time
should be lost in pointing out to the young vine the path it is to
follow and seeing that it obeys. The matter of pruning is of
importance, and is much better left entirely undone unless knowledge
and experience guide the shears. Most vines may be safely left unpruned
if doing well, but if in a weak condition may be cut hard back to
induce a sturdier growth. Maeterlinck says:
“Though there be plants and flowers that are awkward and ungainly,
there is none that is wholly without wisdom and ingenuity,” and it
seems to me that climbing plants are gifted with a special
intelligence. It is well known that all the twining vines twine in a
given direction — that is, from left to right, or the opposite, and
that it is not possible to persuade them to change their plans. It is
remarkable, too, to see their different ways of getting up in the
world, some by means of aerial rootlets, as the Ivy and Ampelopsis;
some by little seeking tendrils that strongly grasp any available
object, as the Clematis and Grape; some which twine themselves around a
given support, as Honeysuckle and Wistaria, and others which throw
themselves recklessly upon anything within their reach and demand a
lift. To this class belong the Climbing Roses. There are of course
annual and perennial vines at our disposal, and while in the
established garden there is little reason to employ the former, in new
gardens they are indispensable to provide a little drapery while the
permanent climbers are getting themselves settled and making a start. Among annuals I must
confess to a weakness for Morning Glories. Thoreau admitted a similar
weakness when he wrote, “It always refreshes me to see it. . . I
associate it with the holiest morning hours.” But Morning Glories have
their faults, and a bad one is that they are apt to impose upon one’s
hospitality. They appear to think that an invitation to spend a summer
in your garden may be stretched to cover any number of summers, and
back they come year after year with never so much as a “by your leave,”
or “which plant may I use as a lift?” I remember once in
my early gardening experience being away for two months during the
summer and finding, upon my return, the garden positively gasping for
breath in the clutches of these unbidden guests. The moment my back was
turned they had risen up all over the garden and climbed like acrobats
up anything so unfortunate as to possess an upright stalk. It was crass
outlawry, of course, and had to be ruthlessly dealt with, but in my
heart I felt that beneath their dainty burden the smug Dahlias had
acquired a grace quite foreign to them, and that the poor
half-strangled Hollyhocks had never looked so lovely as when providing
a trellis for these wantons, with their “fairy loops and rings.” The Japanese have
wrought magic upon the simple Morning Glory, and have created a race
called Japanese Imperial, which will climb eight feet and hang out
marvellously ruffled, scalloped, and fringed blossoms, in gorgeous
shades and combinations, in great profusion. Copper, azure, crimson,
rose colour, all are possible, and many boast a throat or markings of
another tint. To insure quick germination the seeds of this climber may
be notched, or soaked in warm water for a few hours before planting,
and they may be started indoors in little pots for early flowering. The ghostly Moon
Vine, Ipomoea grandiflora, belongs
to the same family as the foregoing. It makes a tremendous growth in a
season, and this fact, with its luxuriant foliage, causes it to be in
great demand for screening porches. The great white blossoms, open only
at night, peer uncannily from the dusky shadows of the dark foliage
with striking effect, but I do not like this great flower which cannot
bear the sweet light of day. Another member of the family considered of
merit is the beautiful Californian I. rubro
caerulea, in its variety, “Heavenly Blue,” which must be
started indoors, and when planted out given a warm and sheltered
situation. The Dolichos, or
Hyacinth Bean, winds its way through Oriental poetry as the Woodbine
and Jasmine through our own. It is a rapid climber, flowering
vigorously, in erect spikes of purple or white pea-shaped flowers, from
July until autumn. It requires a sunny situation and enjoys plentiful
watering in summer. It may be started indoors, or planted out after the
ground is well warmed by the May sunshine. Coboea
scandens is a popular annual
climber. It is a rapid grower and bears in July numerous
greenish-purple cup-and-saucer-like blossoms, which are rather artistic
in their colouring. It enjoys a sunny position and a soil not very
rich, and the seeds should be started indoors. I have been told that
these should be placed edgewise in the pot, but I do not know if this
is fact or tradition. Members of the Hop
and Gourd families provide satisfactory, quick-growing climbers.
Trained over fences and arches the Hop is very graceful and luxuriant,
and even the variegated form of Humulus
Japonicus, the variety usually grown, is quite pretty. Raising Gourds is
very popular in my family, and a single package of mixed seed will
frequently yield some very strange results. Some of the curious fruit
is quite ornamental, but the vines are hardly suitable for planting
save in out-of-the-way places. We start the seed indoors in small pots
and transplant when danger from frost is past. Adlumia
cirrhosa, variously known as
Allegheny Vine, Mountain Fringe, Climbing Fumatory, Wood Fringe, and
Fairy Creeper, is a frail biennial vine which, however, blooms the
first year from seed, of endearing qualities and beguiling grace. Mrs.
Earl, in her charming “Old Time Gardens,” thinks that no garden is
complete without it, “for its delicate green Rue-like leaves lie so
gracefully on Stone and brick walls, or on fences, and it trails its
slender tendrils so lightly over dull shrubs that are not flowering,
beautifying them afresh with an alien, bloom of delicate little pinkish
flowers like tiny bleeding hearts.” Given a rich, warm soil and a sunny
exposure, this frail little climber will sometimes reach a height of
twelve feet and throw itself about in an extravagance of airy festoons
and garlands quite bewitching to see. Last, but most
important, are the two annual climbers most in use: the Nasturtium and
the Sweet Pea. The former is too well known to need description and too
entirely accommodating to require special treatment. There is nothing
it will not do for you, from clothing with a garment of respectability
the spot where the garbage receptacle reposes, to rejuvenating, with
its vitality and brilliance, a dead tree or rotting stump. It is as
proud to climb the netting around the chicken-yard as to scale the
dizzy heights of fashion in the flower garden. Nasturtiums do best
planted in a soil of very moderate richness. High living makes them run
to great juicy stalks and luxuriant foliage, but few flowers. The Sweet Pea is not
quite so simple a proposition in our sun-baked American gardens, and
though loveliest and most desired of annuals it is not often seen
satisfactorily grown, at least in the Middle and Southern States. I
think early planting is the main consideration, and to this end we
prepare in the autumn a trench about ten inches deep. The ground has
been previously deeply dug and enriched with well-rotted cow manure,
and the seed is sown thinly at the bottom of the trench about the
middle of March, and covered with about twc inches of soil. Later, when
the little plants begin to grow, the earth is gradually filled in
around them, until the trench is even with the surrounding surface and
the shrinking roots buried deep in the cool earth, and safe from the
burning rays of the summer sun. If the flowers are planted in the
vegetable garden, or in some other inconspicuous place, a mulch of old
stable litter or grass will further protect the roots and conserve the
moisture, giving to those lovely blossoms a longer tenure of life, and
in the flower garden, where the stable litter would be unsightly, a
living mulch of some lightly rooted annual could be substituted.
Frequent applications of liquid manure during the warm weather will
greatly benefit the plants, and constant picking is the price of
continued bloom. Strong pea-brush firmly inserted in the ground is a
good support for the vines, or chicken wire, strongly staked to resist
the wind. Each season brings forth many beautiful new Sweet Peas, so a
list given now would soon be out of date, but of course the wonderful
Orchid-flowered sorts and those known as “Spencer” or “Waved” are the
best. Of perennial vines
none is more worthy of the choicest site in the garden and of our most
intelligent attention than the Clematis. Indeed one might drape all
one’s walls and arbours with the various species and varieties and be
in no danger of monotony, or suffer from lack of bloom from May until
frost. It is a great race, varied and beautiful, but not to be had, by
any means, for the mere planting. It is not one of those plants which
just grows; it demands the very best that is in us and in our gardens;
it puts us on our mettle, it flouts and discourages us, it lures us on
and sometimes it rewards us in a manner to turn the head of the sanest
gardener. Last summer, when
the exquisite, exotic-looking Clematis
Henryi ascended his trellis to the top of the garden-house
roof, as
nonchalantly as if it were his regular habit, and then hung out, in
breathless
succession, some fifty or sixty huge, gleaming white creations, I felt
that my
garden cup was spilling over at a great rate and that I must indeed be
a master
gardener. The fact that this summer, in the trenchant words of my
assistant,
“Henry up and died ongrateful” in the very flower of his good
intentions,
did not, to any great extent, dim the triumph of those wonderful weeks,
for
truly it was too great an experience to be vouchsafed one every summer. Henryi belongs among
what are called the “large-flowered hybrids,” of which there are a
number of
groups, each containing numerous varieties, and it is toward these that
our
desire and ambition turn, rather than toward the small-flowered, wild
sorts, so
useful and so much more amenable. The old purple C.
Jackmani is the best known of the large-flowered Clematis
and is one of the
most easily managed. There is a superb vine here on the front porch
which decks
itself yearly in an imperial robe and seems to ask for no attention
save a
severe pruning in the early spring. The pruning of these plants is of
great
importance, and each group must be dealt with according to its needs.
The
following directions and descriptions are gleaned from authoritative
writings on
the Clematis, as well as from some experience in my own garden and
observation
in a great many gardens both here and in Great Britain. The soil best
enjoyed by the Clematis is light and rich, and of a loamy texture, with
the
addition of some chalk or lime. Good drainage is essential, but that in
our
country is not the problem that it is in England. An annual dose of
well-rotted
cow manure is needed by the large-flowered hybrids, and all sorts
appreciate a
warm blanket in the winter, not because they are tender so much as that
the
extra nourishment thus procured is beneficial and relieves the plants
of the
strain of our extreme cold. A mulch of stable litter is gratefully
received
after spring planting; this conserves the moisture until the plants are
established and the roots go deep enough to avoid the heat of the sun.
When
growth starts in the spring the tender young shoots should be carefully
looked
after and gently tied to some support, for they are very brittle and
easily
injured, and as it is upon these shoots that many of the sorts bear
their bloom
they merit extra care. It has been discovered that some shade for the
lower
stems of the Clematis vine is essential to its well-being, and so it
may well be
planted at the back of herbaceous borders, to climb the wall or fence,
or trail
over the hedge, or be supported on tall pea-brush. But even with all
these precautions and attentions the large-flowered Clematis will often
“up
and die ongrateful,” and the reason for this, Mr. William Robinson
believes,
is that they are grafted upon unsuitable wild stock, instead of being
raised
from seed or layers; and that they are frequently the victims of a
disease,
bacterial in its nature, “which commences so insidiously that one only
perceives its presence when too late.” Application of Bordeaux mixture
is said
to be a preventive, and also a “pinch of sulphur thrown at the foot of
a plant
after it has begun to grow, and renewed at intervals, is efficacious as
a
preservative from disease.” To those wishing to make a study of this
most
wonderful flower I would suggest Mr. Robinson’s sympathetic and helpful
little
book, “The Virgin’s Bower,” and “The Clematis,” by Moore and Jackman,
now out of print, but procurable through dealers in old books. The
large-flowered hybrids may all be termed slender climbers, and some of
them
reach a considerable height. The
Jackmani Group. Enormously
free flowering in early July and thereafter occasionally through the
summer.
Flowers on new shoots. Prune hard back in late autumn (November) or
early
spring. A splendid vine for trellises, porches, and arches. Fine varieties:
Jackmani superba, large royal purple; Jackmani alba, pure white; Madame
Baron-Veillard,
very free, satiny mauve-pink; Gypsy Queen, reddish-purple. Viticella
Group. Blooms
freely all summer from July and is perhaps the most reliable of the
large-flowered kinds. Flowers on new shoots. Prune rather sharply in
late
November. Perfectly hardy. Flowers not so large as lanuginosa but more
numerous. Fine
varieties: Kermesina, clear reddish-mauve, very free; Grandiflora
punicea,
wine-red; Viticella, bluish purple; Alba, gray, white. Lanuginosa
Group. Enormous
flowers borne successionally through summer and autumn. Flowers on new
wood. In
pruning remove weak shoots and dead wood in spring. Beautiful vine for
trellis
or post. Fine
varieties: Beauty of Worcester, violet-blue; Lady Caroline Neville,
plum; Madame
Van Houtte, white; Marcel Moser, soft lilac with reddish band; Henryi,
pure
white. Florida
Group. Flowers
on old wood. Prune directly after flowering by removing seed vessels
and cutting
out useless or crowded shoots. Blooms in summer. Double. Fine
varieties: Belle of Woking, silver-gray; Duchess of Edinburgh, pure
white. Patens
Group. Flowers
on old wood and requires same treatment as Florida. Spring and summer.
Large and
showy. Fine
varieties: Nellie Koster, rosy-mauve; Miss Bateman, pure white; Mrs.
Geo.
Jackman, satiny white with ivory bar; Sir Garnet Wolseley, dull blue
with
reddish band. Clematis
coccinea. Dies
to the ground in winter, so needs no pruning. Flowers in July and
August.
Scarlet, urn-shaped blossoms. Very gay and effective. Easily grown
sort, and
charming for posts, arches, or for trailing over shrubs and
balustrades. Easily
raised from seed. There are hybrids of this form, but I have not seen
them. The small-flowered
forms of the Clematis are not by any means to be neglected, for these
are among
the most generous and charming of climbers and seldom oppose any
obstacle to our
desires. Much more luxuriant than the large-flowered hybrids, they are
splendid
for porches, pergolas, and walls, dead trees, or for any position where
a
vigorous climber is required. C. montana climbs
to a great height and decorates itself in May with yard-long garlands
of
anemone-like bloom, white with hints of pink and a pleasant fragrance.
There is
a reddish form of montana, more lately introduced, which is said to be
extremely
beautiful, and grandiflora has flowers much larger than the type. To
prune
montana cut away the weak, straggling, or overcrowded branches in late
March,
and carefully train the long year-old wood at full length to cover the
desired
space. C.
paniculata, the
vigorous Japanese climber with masses of creamy bloom in August and
September,
is well known and useful. C. vitalba is
another fluffy, white-flowered sort and a high climber. C.
flammula and C. f. var.
rubra bear, respectively,
clusters of
small white and purple flowers, deliciously scented, in August and
September.
Our own native Traveller’s Joy, C.
virginica, is too well known to need description. It is
quite worthy a place
in the garden, and nothing is more softly lovely for trailing over
rough banks,
rocks, or low fences. All these sorts need no pruning save the removal
of
overcrowded branches, or useless shoots, and any good garden soil and a
sunny
situation inspires them to do their best. Honeysuckles are
endeared to us by long years of companionship, by the wayside and in
the garden.
One cannot imagine a garden without them, though Bacon, in his
well-known essay
“Of Gardens,” in giving a list of plants proper for a garden, while
including Honey-suckles, adds, “so they be somewhat afar off.” What
could
there be in Honeysuckles, “ripened by the sun,” that one would not want
right under one’s nose? Truly the great man had his idiosyncrasies! For
all
its scrambling ways the Honeysuckle seems the most domestic of vines —
to
belong to cottage doorways, time living-room windows, or the favourite
corner of
the porch, and its delicious perfume, which Maeterlinck called the
“soul of
dew,” wafted to us in our country walks and drives seems ever to
proclaim a
home. Hall’s variety is
a very good, almost evergreen Honeysuckle, which blooms from June until
freezing
weather and is a strong, rapid climber. Lonicera
periclymenum is a favourite variety, and its reddish,
fragrant blossoms are
freely produced. I have not found that it grows quite so tall as Hall’s
but it
is useful in many situations. This is the “woodbine” of poetry. Lonicera
japonica var. aurea is
the
golden-leaved sort, seldom seen to advantage, as its foliage is too
striking for
indiscriminate use, but which is very attractive used with
white-flowered
climbing Roses or other white-flowered climbers and with plants of
harmonious
colouring near at hand. There are many sorts of Honeysuckle, but these
three,
with the old trumpet or coral Honeysuckle, L.
sempervirens, ever a source of pride in old gardens, are
enough for much
enjoyment. These sweet and patient vines will stand more neglect than
any
others, will grow in dry, shady places, in stony ground, or in rough
grass, but
will eloquently respond to good living and a comfortable situation. Probably of all
flowering climbers the Wistaria provokes the most ardent admiration.
The Chinese
Wistaria is the best and strongest for our climate, but the Japanese
sort, W. multijuga, which the
Japanese grow along the eaves of their
houses, allowing the superb blossoms to form a fringe sometimes a yard
deep, is
a splendid variety and well worth a trial. Both have white varieties,
which, if
anything, are lovelier than the purple, but it is more satisfying to
have both.
The Chinese and Japanese Wistarias bloom in May, and there is a sort,
American,
I think, W. speciosa, which
flowers in
June and July. But this plant is only useful where a succession is
desired, as
it is not nearly so fine. Wistarias are heavy
feeders; indeed, it would be difficult to provide a too rich diet for
them, and
to this end it is a good plan to trench the soil at least three feet
deep,
filling the hole with a mixture of good garden soil and well-rotted
stable
manure. In the matter of pruning and training I quote Mr. Wm.
McCollom’s
valuable book on vines: “If a Wistaria has been growing undisturbed for
a few
years, you will find that it has a large percentage of long, thin, wiry
shoots.
These do not produce flowers and should be removed at any time of the
year. The
short, stumpy spurs are the kind that flower, and to produce these the
plants
should be pruned back to within two or three eyes of the flowers
immediately
after they fall. The aim always should be to keep one good shoot coming
on each
season, to provide room for it cut one of the oldest shoots out
entirely. If you
desire the plant to attain a great height, keep one of the shoots
growing until
it has reached the height desired, when it can be spurred in to produce
flowers.
‘Spurring’ is clipping off the top and cutting the laterals close to
the
main stem.” No finer climber exists for pergolas, walls, or porches
than the
Wistaria, and its period of bloom is ever a ‘delight. A vine of great
vigour and pertinacity is Tecoma radicans,
better known as the Trumpet Creeper. By the way, the
most recent authorities
give Campsis as the correct name instead of Tecoma. It is a bold
climber, which
south of New Jersey decorates the woods and roadsides in a wild state
and which,
Miss Loundsberry says, has become a troublesome weed in parts of the
west, very
difficult to eradicate, but how splendid must be the wastes illumined
by its
vivid bloom. It climbs by means
of aerial rootlets and will cling to wood or stone, which makes it
valuable for
covering buildings, as there is no trouble in fastening it up, but it
is a
great, tumbling, boisterous thing, fitter to climb the walls of the
stables or
outbuildings than of the dwelling. For pergola and trellis it is a bit
too free
and energetic, but for positions where a bold, striking effect is
desired there
is nothing better. Its orange-scarlet flowers are borne in August and
seem a
fitting introduction to the ruddy tints so soon to prevail. Any
necessary
pruning should be done in spring, as the flowers form on the new wood.
If given
a rich soil and a sunny situation the vine is capable of a height of
forty feet.
The Chinese Tecoma
grandiflora with
its variety atrosanguinea are
better
in most ways than T. radicans. A slender climber,
very dear to me from long association, is Akebia
quinata. I think I have never seen it in any garden save my
own and the
garden of my childhood. There it formed, in its luxuriance, a deep
reveal around
the library windows, and in spring rendered the room almost untenable
with its
clouds of warm perfume. This was a very old vine, for the Akebia is a
slender
thing, and the cushion-like growth that I remember must have been the
result of
many years. This climber is a Japanese, and Donald McDonald, in his
book of
“Fragrant Flowers and Leaves,” says that it is much used in decorating
eastern gardens. The foliage is small and very pretty, and the little
three-cornered, brownish-plum coloured blossoms, which cover the vine,
literally
from top to toe, are quaint and pretty and deliciously sweet. Here it
very
delightfully veils one end of the garden-house porch, and blooms about
the first
of May. English garden books frequently refer to the Akebia as not
quite hardy,
but certainly here it has proved itself quite equal to the New York
winters. A
light, rich soil is its preference, and it will grow in partial shade.
It needs
no pruning, save an occasional shortening of the long branches to
encourage
growth at the bottom, for this slender thing is apt to hurry to the top
of its
trellis and then fling itself about in an abandon of wreaths and
garlands, quite
unmindful of the neediness of its lower limbs. Actinidia arguta is
another Japanese vine not often seen.
It
is of twining habit and bears little clusters of ivory-coloured
blossoms with
black anthers, and the foliage is dark and fine.
It loves a sunny situation, and after the first two
years, when the plant
is thoroughly established, may be cut back about half in early spring
to keep it
in good and full condition. An old friend is the
Matrimony Vine, Lycium chinensis, but not so valued
but what one may
easily do without it. Its
red berries
are attractive, but the blossoms are unimportant and the foliage too
prone to
mildew; and altogether I should choose something else. Aristolochia
sipho is a
climber that I frankly dislike, though my feeling is not shared by
many, for I
frequently see it on porches, annihilating sunshine and air, but
forming an
effective screen. Its leaves are large and its growth dense, and the
curious
chocolate-coloured blossoms somewhat resemble a pipe in shape, hence
the name,
Dutchman’s Pipe. A vine of fairly
recent introduction and one of real value, it seems to me, is Polygonum baishuanicum, a slender
climber, with masses of filmy
white flowers in the late summer. It makes a fairly heavy growth and is
a good
climber for trellises and porches. Of vines grown
largely for their foliage none is so fine as the English Ivy, “the vine
of
glossy sprout,” and contrary to the suspicions of many we may have it
in a
good deal of luxuriance in this country if a little courtesy is
extended to it.
In the first place, we impatient Americans must be patient with the
British
deliberateness of the Ivy. For two years after planting, and sometimes
three, it
will do nothing but survey the situation and venture a leaf or two, but
after
that given time, good soil, and a north wall it will start a steady
ascent and
very soon present a broad and beautiful surface of dark and shining
green. Mr.
McCollom recommends protecting the young plants in winter for a few
years with a
mulch of manure and a screen of evergreen branches. Sometimes the
leaves become
brown and dry in winter, but those may be rubbed off and the vine will
reclothe
itself in a short time. Of course the Ivy is not the vine for all
situations in
our country, a southern exposure being very trying to it, but wherever
a close,
green covering is desired and it is possible to establish the Ivy the
result
will more than justify the trouble and waiting. We are much too
quick to plant the accommodating Ampelopsis
Veitchii, which, while one of the most useful of vines, is
much too rampant
and pervasive a subject for many situations. There are several species
of
Ampelopsis besides Veitchii. There are two varieties growing here, purpurea,
and robusta, but I
can see little difference between these and Veitchii,
in fact I cannot tell the one from the other. Its fine autumn colouring
is the
chief charm of this vine and in this it is outclassed by its relative,
the
Virginia Creeper (Ampelopsis quinquefolia),
overlooked perhaps in summer, but claiming the
admiration of all in autumn,
when every low wall in the countryside has its burning tangle and high
in the
branches of many a tree Nature’s signal fires flash forth. It is a
graceful,
headlong vine, clinging closely, then hanging in great, loose festoons,
and ever
impatient of restraint. Any hint from us in the way of cleats or
binding cords
is not respectfully received; indeed, will probably not be noticed at
all, for
the Virginia Creeper will swing, or wave or cling or creep as the
notion takes
it, and perhaps it is this wayward quality which makes it a beloved
thing. Another native which
endures garden life with equanimity is Celastrus
scandens, the Bittersweet, the chief glory of which is the
gay scarlet
berries that remain upon it all winter long and create a bit of cheer
in the
white winter garden. It will grow in sun or shade, and takes kindly to
any lift
offered for its upward journey. Euonymus radicans is a good evergreen vine, where great height is not required, for it seldom goes higher than eight feet and is pretty deliberate in getting that far. For low walls it is excellent, and the variegated form is pretty used in many situations. When one reads such a book as Mr. McCollom’s “Vines,” one realizes the great number of climbers in existence and the few in general cultivation. My own list is a slender one, but all these, unless otherwise stated, are both willing and lovely, and whatever, other climbers are lacking these should be in every garden. |