Re: fried clematis
- Subject: Re: fried clematis
- From: Denise Leonard d*@equinox.shaysnet.com
- Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 20:28:08 -0400 (EDT)
Mine seem to do this yearly. They always come back in the spring, but by
mid to late summer, they look dead - dried out and brown. I just plant
morning
glories around them. They come into their own about the time the clematis
look awful. I suspect that it has something to do with the drought and
heat, although mine have been watered with a soaker hose the past two
summers.
Denise Leonard
Tanstaafl Farm
Greenfield, MA
dal@shaysnet.com
On Tue, 10 Sep 2002 Blee811@aol.com wrote:
> In a message dated 9/10/02 3:52:22 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
> corgilover@wi.rr.com writes:
>
>
> > I planted it two years ago on the south side of my pale cream brick
> > home (feet in the shade under a nearby bush). It began to climb
> > nicely in the spring and got about 5 feet high and then literally
> > fried in the heat (both stems and all leaves are crispy brown). It
> > was watered regularly, but I think the heat radiating off the brick
> > toasted it.
> >
> > Anyone care to speculate on my chances of it coming up again?
> >
>
> I've got a couple of clematis that look like this too. One started going
> before the rain stopped. There is a wilt that infects clematis--don't ask me
> the scientific aspects of it--but I've read that the thing to do is cut the
> dead parts back to the ground, put a little compost around, water well, and
> it will regrow.
>
> I guess we won't really know for sure until next year whether we've got
> plants that have recovered from clematis wilt or dead clematis.
> Bill Lee
>
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