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The sweetly scented tubular orange flowers of this native honeysuckle often attract hummingbirds to the garden throughout the summer. Flowers are followed by bright red fruit, attractive to birds. Unlike its Japanese cousin, it is a well-behaved member of the border. A twining vine, it needs a trellis or fence for support.
Stauntonia hexaphylla HC 970600 $15.75
Stauntonia Vine
An evergreen vine related to Holboellia with palmately compound leaves and fragrant, white-flushed purple flowers followed by large, fleshy, lavender-apricot colored fruit. Perfectly hardy to 5¦F, these are from the very prolific specimen that grows at the Miller Botanic Garden in north Seattle. We grow this to good effect on the trellis surrounding the hot tub at Heronswood; its evergreenosity makes for a tidy vine around the water.
Trachelospermum 'Tricolor' $16.95
Confederate Jasmine
Variegation at its most fabulous. Creeping plant with new growth that emerges hot pink and turns to white splashed on green. The result is a layered jewel that resembles a grouping of pink and white florist's cyclamens. Compact, and low growing, it performs in a container or hanging basket as well as in its more familiar territory, as a ground cover for foliage contrast. Soaks up the heat and withstands drought without fading.
This proven cultivar gives rise to scrambling stems of bluish green foliage and long-spurred, cup-shaped, fantastically brilliant orange flowers in midsummer. Will bloom earlier if deprived of ample water after new growth is established. Collect tubers in autumn (which form at the ground surface) and store in peatmoss during winter or, in milder climates, plant them more deeply.
Native to eastern Asia, this deciduous vine attaches itself by means of numerous small branched tendrils tipped with sticky disks. It is distinguished from its close relative, Virginia creeper, by the simple leaves, palmately compound with three leaflets as opposed to five. The inconspicuous clusters of greenish flowers are followed by small dark blue grape-like leaves.
A striking deciduous kiwi with brightly tri-colored foliage of green, white and pink and clusters of tiny fragrant white flowers in early summer; extraordinary when covering a semi-shaded trellis or wall. These robust plants will show evidence of the colorful foliage, however the leaves will often revert entirely to green during the initial period of establishment. Collected in the mountains of South Korea in 1993. Any well-draining soil with moderate amounts of moisture.

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