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Old 25-05-2013, 06:09 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
David Hill David Hill is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: May 2012
Posts: 2,947
Default Beautiful week end!

On 25/05/2013 17:49, Sacha wrote:
On 2013-05-25 13:11:12 +0100, Bob Hobden said:

"Sacha" wrote
Yes, sometimes you just have to grow what you can grow, fun though it
is to push the envelope at times! We have 3 Wisterias growing as
standards on the main lawn and one is just hopeless. It comes into
leaf long before the flowers show and flowers poorly anyway. Ray
keeps saying 'give it a chance' but as far as I'm concerned, it's had
3 or 4 years, so that's it. Out! We had another on the house wall
(planted long before Ray came here) and it did just the same, so it's
had to go.


It's funny how some Wisteria do that, it detracts so much from the
effect. Ours covering our S facing wall always flowers before the
leaves and has been stunning this year. A neighbour who bought one for
the same position on her house had no flowers at all but in her case I
think it's too much pruning after years of no where near enough so it
will be my fault. Mind you hers does have some decades to go to reach
the age of ours and it's a grafted plant too.


The one at the top of the Magnolia delavayi is in full bloom but as
Charlie explained, it's been allowed to do its own thing and has reached
optimum height so simply flowers wonderfully and at will! One of those
on the lawn - the longest established - is just breaking now and is
covered in blooms, the second is just about to go but has just a very
few leaves breaking and the third is the rogue with literally one raceme.


I seem to remember being taught that Wisteria could take 10 or more
years to start to flower properly