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When training a vine on an arbor, for instance, it is desirable for the vine to rapidly reach the top and grow over the structure to provide shade below. Lattice work.
This vine will grow best in well-drained organic soils and produces the most blooms if planted in full sun. Crossvine can ...
Vines can be trained onto almost any structure -- deck, porch, shed, pergola, wall, fence, pole or arbor. The type of climber being trained determines how it should be attached. Plants climb in ...
Climbing vines are great features in the garden, as long as you monitor and train vines such as clematis on their supports. It’s best to do this on a regular basis to direct the vines where you ...
Training vines requires an early start. Dan Gill. LSU AgCenter Horticulturist. No other group of plants can be used to create the effects that vines do in the landscape.
Pumpkins are great crops to grow, but not every space can accommodate a pumpkin patch. Each pumpkin vine can grow 20 to 30 feet long with secondary shoots and even tertiary growth, creating a ...
Pergola: A vine-training system whereby the cane and spurs of a vine grow high above the ground, oftentimes overhead, aided by tall wood stakes that shape the plant like a door frame. Agricultural ...
Cordon-trained: Refers to a method of vine training. Cordon-trained vines are supported by a trellising system; typically one or two cordons, or branches, are trained horizontally out of the main ...
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