Antiginon - an easy vine to manage
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 14 ม.ค. 2025
- Some vines can grow out of control, taking over everything. On this edition of Get It Growing, LSU AgCenter horticulturist Dan Gill introduces you to the Rose of the Montana or antiginon (an-tih’-gih-non) - a beautiful flowering vine that attracts wildlife and is easy to manage.
This is the bane of my existence. There's no winter here and it covers everything and makes the property look neglected. If you don't get the whole seed it grows back. Every piece you break off can root and start a new vine.
How to propagate them from cutting?
I'm all for growing anything that attracts the bees and butterflies!
This is everywhere in my country in the road side and .. No need to water they grow very fast and cover evry spaces they get
This is my favourite vine -- beautiful AND tough! Would that Clematis could grow as vigorously and effortlessly. I have been, for about half a decade, perplexed by complaints I've read about Antigion's so called invasiveness, as if it were a monster invader of the morning glory sort. Well a few days ago I got my first bit of evidence supporting this claim. I had to jack hammer out a big Antiginon that was covering ten foot wax privets to make way for a new cement driveway, which grieved me to no end. BUT -- two days ago I found dozens of tiny antiginon volunteers spurting up all around where the mother plant was ripped out.
I was astonished because I could never successfully propagate from cuttings or seed this favourite plant of mine. Well, evidently the tiny seeds take a bit of time to germinate -- I am suspecting YEARS...to germinate, but when they do, whammo! Which thus far still delights me, but all these cute little volunteers can individually grow into humongous vines if one is not, I suspect, very watchful and careful.
Now, after the driveway is completed, I may have to jackhammer out a whole row of privets that have also formed the substance of two arbors in order to make room for a picket fence between hedges and sidewalk with new matching arbors. Well the pink coral vines on it are planted back a good foot or so and, therefore, I am hoping to simply let the anitginon scramble up around said new arbors by themselves, except with some support from twenty year old vintage climbing roses, huge white "Chicago Peaces" and red "First Prizes", six inch diameters of immense and striking beauty, but which themselves do no last in flower very long as opposed to the antiginons, which are amazingly persistent in retaining their rich and copious blooms for two straight months. And the old climbing roses are likely planted a tad too close to the sidewalk, so, sadly, it is probably curtains for them, alas.
I live in the very hot San Fernando Valley, and it is predicted that we are in for another of those hellish 115 degree heat waves that kill all beauty almost indiscriminately. I do have four little clematises under heavy shade protection, but only one Nelly Moser has ever succeeded for more than one season, and I've planted maybe dozens of Earnest Holmes, Jackmanii, etc etc, and they just about always die ghastly deaths. When will I ever learn? Ah, horticulture -- ah, the GRIM fun of kvetching about God damned horticulture!
is there a special time and way to prune the vines?
There isn't usually a need prune through it's annual growth cycle unless you are in an area with no cold season.
Can we gror this vine from cutting
So this would be doable in Michigan as an annual?
Do you have the white flowering variety?
It is available in three colors, a deep hot pink, pale pink, and white.
I planted it next to my tank which is Underground will the roots do damage to the wall
izin download ya kak.. thanks 💕
Does it grow by stem cuttings
Common name that I know it by is Coral Vine.
Muito lindo mais um escrito si escreva Mandaguaçu Paraná sucesso.