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Does anyone know if the ampelopsis berries are poisonous? I also have an
area which this would be perfect in but I also have two dogs who eat almost
anything. Thanks so much.
Joanie Andreson
35 mi. n. of Chicago, zone 5
In a message dated 1/15/2012 9:20:06 A.M. Central Standard Time,
aete@northnet.org writes:
The
cultivar I have -- 'Elegans' -- is definitely not invasive here. I would
love to see some seedlings.
Alyce Elliott zone 4
At 11:44 PM
1/14/2012, you wrote:
Hi, all. Just wondered if
the porcelain vine is invasive that far up north. It is in
Tennessee. The Akepia filled up 7 truck loads and still is running
around on the mountain side. It is not making seed but the vines were
going across the creek and I could see it taking over a mountain side in 15
years. My native honeysuckles would fill an arbor and not be
too heavy. Also have a white jasmine that is hardy here to 0. It
just does not grow fast enough to make a nice screen though. I can see we
are all dreaming about planting something....anything now. Got all
those evergreens to get out soon, myself. Nancy Tennessee
- Original Message -----
- From: l*@hotmail.com
- To: p*@hort.net
- Sent: Saturday, January 14, 2012 7:30 PM
- Subject: RE: Ideas for an arbor
- I agree about the porcelain vine. I had one at my last house, and the
variegation was great, and then the bonus of those wonderful coloured
berries each fall. It was a favourite. Took a couple of years to get
established but did perfectly fine. Was mostly shade and didn't seem to
mind at all. Hmmm - now that I have a very tiny garden, maybe it can
be a "vertical Interest"
- Lil Taggart
- Georgetown ON
- z 5
- Date: Sat, 14 Jan 2012 12:10:47 -0500
- To: perennials@hort.net
- From: aete@northnet.org
- Subject: Re: Ideas for an arbor
- Don, one of my favorite vines:
- Ampelopsis brevipedunculata var. maximowiczii 'Elegans', which I
simply call my porcelain berry.
- I grow this on an arbor at the entrance of my front walk here in
northern NY zone 4, though it is a zone 5--9 plant (I live right next to a
river). The leaves are gorgeous, variegated, deeply cut. The
small greenish-white flowers are attractive. The berries are amazing
but not as nice as they'd be with more sun than they get here. Grows
10--20 feet, but only about 12' here. Having said all that, I'm sure
this vine would be even happier in your zone 5. It gets started
later than the kiwi vine across from it (which also gets some white and
pink in its leaves.)
- Replying to your 5 points:
- 1. I love the look of your non-'chateau'! Might it be an old
Queen Anne Victorian?
- 2 & 3. My arbor has the same aspect as yours, but it does not have
a house right behind it. I have the following quote copied to my
porcelain berry culture sheet: "An attractive variegated form with white
and pink splashes on the leaves, tends to not fruit as well as the type
and is less vigorous." So far the kiwi has reached up and across the
top of the arbor while the porcelain berry is just beginning to reach
over. The kiwi takes constant pruning, the porcelain berry only
needs directing.
- 4 & 5. I've never had Akebia so can't compare it to Ampelopsis. I
have Campsis, Celastrus, various Clematis, Lonicera, Hydrangea petiolaris,
Euonymous -- and the Ampelopsis is one of my favorites. Hmm, maybe
there's a Clematis viticella for your situation? I have a C. Hagley
Hybrid that faces north on the front of a pavilion and has done great for
years, (unlike some of my clematis) however, it may not grow high enough
for your situation -- 8-10'.
- 6. My "less vigorous" Ampelopsis etc. 'Elegans' can take far colder
temps than what is listed.
- Let us know what you finally choose! Hope we see a
finished-project photo.
- Best,
- Alyce Elliott
- near Oxbow, northern NY
- At 04:24 PM 1/10/2012, you wrote:
- I came upon the following photo from a
catalog:
- http://www.tinyurl.com/7olll9t
- This gave me an idea to create an arbor over my rear door and small
deck (the black lines are for reference only):
- http://www.tinyurl.com/6vw2kre
- Issues (construction and materials aside):
- 1. Obviously, I don't happen to own a chateau at the
moment.
- 2. The deck faces a direction which is approximately
East-Northeast and only receives a bit of morning sun, although plants
on the deck seem to do relatively well as it is a bright shade.
- 3. The small patch of open ground (indicated on the second
photo) gets no sun at all, and so whatever I plant won't get ANY direct
sunlight until it gets above the level of the deck.
- 4. I'm thinking some sort of perennial vine, probably woody,
but not so rampant that it will require constant pruning (so, no
Wisteria or Vitis). Iâd consider Akebia quinata , but I
already have 2 of those (purple and white), and they do quite well along
the north side of my house.
- 5. Iâd consider other species of Akebia if they would look a
bit different (trifoliata?) or even the variegated A. quinata (does
anyone know of a source of a nice clone of this)?
- 6. I live in Milwaukee (Zone 5) and despite our very mild
winter so far, we can normally expect temps down to â10F (-25C) or even
lower.
- Thanks in advance for any suggestions.
- Don Martinson
- Wauwatosa, WI 53213
- Supporting the Organization for
Tropical
Studies
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