By
Norman Winter Many
gardeners shop for plants that will bloom all summer right
up until fall. That's a pretty tall order to fill
considering our extreme summer climate, but there are
several that will fill the bill. Tropical
plants offer us some of our best options for plants with
five or six months of continuous bloom. At the top of that
list has to be the hybrid Mandevilla Alice du
Pont. The
Mandevilla is from Brazil, but at the garden center you will
get the feeling it is one of the locals. It is related to
the Allamanda vine with yellow, bell-shaped flowers and to
plumeria, the flowers that leis are made out of in
Hawaii. Alice du
Pont has large, pink, bell-shaped flowers produced on a
vigorous vine. The dark, glossy leaves have a leathery
feeling. If you
have seen a big, pink-flowered vine growing up a neighbor's
mailbox, this was probably the plant. As with almost every
other plant I write about, it needs well-drained soil or it
will die. For best flowering, you will want your Mandevilla
to receive at least six to eight hours of sunlight a day.
Full sunlight is better. Since it
is such a vigorous vine and flower producer, it needs small
doses of fertilizer every two to three weeks. Use a
balanced, water-soluble fertilizer. Be sure a maintain
moisture during the hot, dry times of the summer. A
prolonged period without water may prove fatal to the
plant. Last
year, I saw two different plantings of Mandevilla that made
me want to cry because they weren't at my house. The first
really made me slap my head and ask why I didn't of
that. One
gardener had a Mandevilla planted in a large basket hanging
on a long chain at least two stories high. The Mandevilla
was growing up the six or seven foot long chain, and you
really couldn't see the chain for the leaves and the
flowers. A tri-color ornamental sweet potato flowing out of
the basket in all directions helped set off the Mandevilla.
One of the three colors was the same pink as the
Mandevilla. The
other planting I saw was growing in the landscape. The
gardener had a cottage-style garden with a white picket
fence. The Mandevilla was climbing and intertwining nicely
with dozens of blooms, but like the last scenario, it was
the combination plant that really set the stage. The
gardener was growing a giant, iridescent blue-flowered
clematis right next to the Mandevilla. This mixture of
southern perennial and Brazilian tropical was not only bold
but spectacular. If you
have lattice structures around the house, the Mandevilla is
one plant that is a must. Its ability to climb and bloom
until fall makes it a winner. Being a tropical from Brazil
means that gardeners on the Coast probably south of I-10 can
get it to establish permanently. The rest of us will have to
either treat it as an annual or give it winter
protection. Before
bringing it indoors, cut off all growth to make it the
desired shape. It will not bloom indoors unless it is in a
sunroom. Our goal is simply to hold the plant until the next
planting season. Another
method, and probably the easiest for most of us, is to cut
it back to about 6 inches and provide as bright a light as
possible with just minimal water. Do not fertilize during
this time. As the plant grows, we can keep it pinched back
to leaf axis, and the plant will develop a bushy
habit. In the
spring, we can repot or plant in the landscape and resume
our fertilization program. Mandevillas are hot buys right
now, so take advantage of the season. Released:
May 31, 1999 Editor's Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns are within one month of their release. Editors should examine older columns carefully for any information that could be time sensitive.
Southern
Gardening
Mandevilla Yields
Top Summerlong Color
MSU Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Contact: Norman Winter, (601) 857-2284
Visit: DAFVM
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