Monday, June 24, 2024

Honeysuckle Trumpet Vine

 Years ago I had Yellow and Orange Honeysuckle Trumpet Vine all around the grain bin.  Apparently birds pooped the seeds all over as they come up in the woods here and there.  I only see the yellow not the orange ones.


It did not survive around the grain bin...but it is thriving in the woods.  Go figure. 

Far Side

15 comments:

  1. I'm not sure why that is but that seems to be the way. Plants grow better where I don't want them.

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  2. We have the same thing here and it didn't make sense. Now I know.

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  3. I’m not a fan of honeysuckle. I spray to kill it. Sister Helen transplants it. Takes all kinds.

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  4. Of course! Why do what someone would like you to do :)

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  5. I understand. For years I put different plants at the east end of the house and for years they died. I dug honey suckle out of the tree line and planted them there, even though I knew they weren't the right thing to plant there. I figured they'd die. They did not, so I am constantly cutting the back. Go figure.

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  6. Plants in the wild always seem to be healthier somehow. A shame the one by the bin died as it is a very pretty flower :)

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  7. I'm glad they are surviving someplace. :) :)

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  8. it is interesting to see how plants react. The prairie plants I have had for years are doing fine. The creeping bluebell which I accidently got from my mother when she gave me a hosta was fine early this year but it can't stand our heat wave and is drying up. I wonder how much of it will come up next year.

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  9. I have heard of honeysuckle but wouldn't know it if walked into it

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  10. I've seen the reddish orange ones but never yellow. What a insistent plant!

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  11. Plants have a mind of their own. Like some of us. :-)

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  12. I have a yellow honeysuckle and it grows wildly but doesn't have many flowers at all. I have a red one that is very civilized and blooms the way it should.
    Hummingbirds love those flowers💗.

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  13. Go figure. I had the same luck with some flowers I transplanted to the garden in Spokane. They grew fine in the yard ten feet away but when put in the garden. Dead, dead, dead.
    Blessings,
    Betsy

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Thanks for stopping by! I appreciate your comments! If you have a question I will try to answer it here. I no longer accept anonymous comments. All comments will be approved before posting...due to spammers...may the fleas of a thousand camels infest every hair on his body. Connie