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Planting, Growing, and Pruning Wisteria
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Types
Native Wisteria
If you are located in North America, consider planting a species of wisteria native to the continent, such as:
- American wisteria (W. frutescens) grows in Zones 5 to 9. It’s native to a range of states covering Virginia to Texas, southeast to Florida and north up through New York, Iowa, and Michigan. The vine grows 25 to 30 feet long with shiny dark-green leaves and large, drooping lilac or purple-blue flower clusters, which appear after the plant has leafed out. The blooms will only appear on new wood. However, note that the flowers tend to be more lightly fragrant than the Asian wisterias’ flowers.
- Kentucky wisteria (W. macrostachya) grows in Zones 4 to 9. This late-season bloomer is native to the southeastern U.S. and is similar to American wisteria (it is sometimes considered a variety or subspecies of American wisteria). Kentucky wisteria bears mildly fragrant bluish-purple flowers after growing only 2 to 3 years, making it the quickest wisteria to bloom.
- ‘Blue Moon’ is an extra-hardy cultivar of native Kentucky wisteria, with showy silvery-blue clusters. It blooms in late spring or early summer. It’s cold hardy to –30°F.
Non-Native Wisteria
- Chinese wisteria (W. sinensis) and Japanese wisteria (W. floribunda) are non-native, invasive species, so we do not recommend them for North American gardens, despite the fact that they are regularly sold at nurseries and garden centers. They are hardy in Zones 5 to 9 and are capable of growing 30 to 60 feet in length (and beyond in the Southern U.S.). Two common varieties of Japanese wisteria include:
- ‘Honbeni’ (syn. ‘Honko’): popular, bears clusters of pink flowers in late spring
- ‘Alba’ (syn. ‘Shiro Noda’): bears lovely clusters of pure-white flowers in late spring
Gardening Products
Can you take cuttings from Wisteria?
Thanks for the question and the two reply's. I've tried three or four different ways to take cuttings and have yet to get one cutting to take off. Can you please give me insight as to how to start a cutting? I've tried to put it in water, directly from plant to dirt, from plant to dirt with easy start powder. The last with the best result but they all died in one day after showing promise by living almost two weeks.
have you tried layering the plant? Scrape away the 'skin' of one side of a whippy shoot until you get the the cambium layer and pin it down and wait a few months and you have a plant.
In reply to the question of can you take cuttings from wisterias, yes you can. often, nursery's will use cuttings of wisterias as they are difficult to grow from seed
My wysteriais growing great, but the leaves are a little brown and crunchy on the ends. Does that mean not enough water ? We planted them this spring, we had a olate freeze. But they are growing great, no flowers though.
can you twist wisteria stems to make a standard like you do with fig trees if you can could I do it with a white and blue wisteria (which I plan to buy) and possibly a red wisteria too to make a multi-coloured wisteria can you help me please?.
I'm looking to join the wisteria club!
However I want a tree, not a climber. Is there something different in the name I should be looking for? Please help!
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