Gardening
By
Lisa Hallett Taylor
Lisa Hallett Taylor
Lisa Hallett Taylor is an expert in architecture and landscape design who has written more than 1,000 articles about pool, patio, garden, and home improvement over 12 years. She has a bachelor's degree in Environmental Design and is certified in fine and decorative arts appraisal.
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Updated on 03/10/21
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Now that you've built apergolaover your patio or an arbor in your garden, it's time to select the perfect vines to climb and decorate your overhead structure. In addition to providing shade, vines emphasize the shape of a pergola orarbor, whether it's arched, flat, or some other configuration. Living, growing greenery can also soften a structure.
Know that these vines are easy to grow, like full sun, and are drought tolerant once they are established. A bonus: some produce pretty, colorful flowers and a nice fragrance.
01 of 15
Bougainvillea
Botanical name: Bougainvillea glabra
Flower color:It's not flowers thatbloom, but large, papery, colorful bracts that come in various shades of red, pink, purple, orange, white, yellow, and orange.
Size:30 feet.
If you want a vine that produces a riot of color up and across an arbor, trellis, or pergola and you reside in the Mediterranean or sunny climate, bougainvillea might be your answer. This native to tropical and subtropical South America can be planted in a container and used on patios as a summer annual then moved to a protected area during the winter.
This vine can grow quickly, depending on the variety.If training on an outdoor structure, tie shoots to strong support to avoid wind damage.
02 of 15
Bower Vine
Botanical name: Pandoreajasminoides(Tecomajasminoides)
Flower color: White or pink.
Size: 30 feet.
A native of Australia,P. jasminoidesgrows quickly and produces white flowers with pink throats that bloom from late spring to early fall. One variety, 'Deep Pink Form,' is fragrant. It prefers regular water.
03 of 15
Cape Honeysuckle
Botanical name:Tecomacapensis(Tecomariacapensis)
Flower color: Orange-red.
Size: Up to 40 feet or more.
This South African native can be hard-pruned into a shrub or left alone it quickly becomes a vine with shiny dark green leaflets. Hardy, theCape Honeysuckle withstandswind, salt, and air and requires little water once established. Flowers are compact and appear from fall into spring (in warmer climates).
04 of 15
Carolina Jessamine
Botanical name:Gelsemium sempervirens
Flower color:Yellow.
Size:20 feet.
This Southern-sounding beauty is a native to the southeastern United States. Leaves are shiny and light green and attached to long branches that grow in different directions. Climbing up a trellis, arbor, or pergola, Carolina Jessamine's vines will hang down and blow in the wind. Yellow flowers are trumpet-shaped and fragrant.
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05 of 15
Chocolate Vine
Botanical name: Akebia quinata
Flower color: Plum; reddish-purple or dull purple.
Size: To about 30 feet.
A native to Japan, China, and Korea, Akebia is admired for its dainty leaves and dangling clusters of vanilla-scented flowers. Thechocolate vine bears edible fruit that looks like a long, purplish sausage. Arbors, trellises, and pergolas help support this climber.
06 of 15
Clematis
Botanical name: Clematis
Flower color: More than 200 species exist, and colors include blue (pictured), red, pink, white, lavender, magenta, dark purple, yellow, and more.
Size: Some varieties can reach 20 feet and beyond.
This beautiful vining plant requires about six hours of daily sunlight to get the greatest number of blooms. Plant where clematis can climb up an arbor, pergola, trellis, or fence to give the stems support. A long-held belief is that clematis must be planted with its "feet in the shade and head in the sun," but regular water and mulch should be sufficient. Plant near shallow ground covers or plants that won't compete for root and ground space.
07 of 15
Climbing Roses
Botanical name: Rosa
Colors: A variety of colors such aswhite, pink, red, yellow, etc.
Size: To 40 feet or more.
The climbing species can be vigorous, covering the roof of a house or up into a tree. The more moderate climbers are ideal for pergolas and arbors. Besides being beautiful, some have intoxicating scents.
08 of 15
Grapes
Botanical name: Vitis vinifera
Floweror fruit colors: Grapes are purple, green, black, or combinations of these colors.
Size: Can grow to 20 feet or more.
Take a drive through California's highways and backroads, and you'll see grapevines growing on hills, in front yards, and seemingly on every spare plot of land. Everyone is taking advantage of the climate and soil to grow grapes and make wine.
Grape-growing for wine-making is not just a matter of growing a few vines and making wine in the basem*nt. While grapes prefer a Mediterranean climate, they aren't limited to those regions. One thing grapevines need is support, and a pergola or arbor provides the perfect framework for them to climb and thrive.
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09 of 15
Giant Burmese Honeysuckle
Botanical name: Lonicerahildebrandiana
Flower color: White.
Size: To 30 feet.
A fast-growing native to China, Giant Burmese honeysuckle is an especially attractive vine for arbors and pergolas although it needs strong support. Leaves are oval, glossy, and dark green while flowers blossom white turning to yellow and orange. Flowers pop up in summer and are fragrant.
10 of 15
Moonflower
Botanical name:Ipomoea alba
Flowers: White and theyopen at night or on overcast days. Needs heat to bloom.
Size: Up to about 30 feet.
Moonflower is a fast-growing vine that provides quick shade for an arbor or pergola. Its funnel-shaped flowers are fragrant.
11 of 15
Passion Flower
Botanical name: Passiflora
Flower colors: White, pink, purple, red, yellow,and orange, with different colored centers and all kinds of variations. Some species are fragrant.
Size: Can climb to 40 feet or more.
Natives of tropical Americas, Asia,Australia, and the South Pacific, the genus includes more than 500 species, most of which are vines. When provided support such as a pergola or arbor, a passion vine will attach to the structure and other plants with coiled tendrils. Passionflowers are tolerant of most soils, but like regular water and sun with dappled shade for optimum growing performance.
Blue passionflower (Passiflora caerulea), pictured, bears edible fruits (maypops). Wait until the fruit is fully ripe before eating, as unripened passion fruit can cause stomach pain. Some species have long been used as healing herbs to help insomnia and anxiety.
12 of 15
Pink Jasmine
Botanical name:Jasminiumpolyanthum
Flower color: White and rose.
Size: To about 20 feet.
This evergreen vine hails from China and is popular for its highly fragrant blossoms that are rose on the outside and white inside. Jasmine can be planted in the ground or in containers and trained over arbors or pergolas. In warmer climates, it blooms during the late winter through spring, but flowers can appear throughout the year.
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13 of 15
Trumpet Creeper
Botanical name:Campsis radicans
Flower color:Red, orange, and yellow.
Size:To 40 feet.
Also known as common trumpet creeper, this vine is a native to the eastern United States and is popular in cold climates but will grow in other regions as well and is drought tolerant once established. A fast grower, it can quickly reach 40 feet. Tubular flowers bloom throughout the summer months.
14 of 15
Trumpet Honeysuckle
Botanical name:Lonicera sempervirens
Flower color:Scarlet to yellow-orange.
Size: To 20 feet.
The showy, trumpet-shaped flowers of this vine are deep red toorange but have no scent. It blooms from late spring throughsummer and also produces long leaves that are medium green above and bluish green beneath. Some varieties such as 'Cedar Lane,' are vigorous growers.
15 of 15
Wisteria
Botanical name: Wisteria
Flower colors: Beautiful clusters of purple, blue, white, or pink blossoms.
Size: Varies according to species and location; some grow to 40 feet or more.
Wisteria that is grown as a vine should be pruned and trained to control size and shape and to produce a strong trunk. Cut back or pinch long streamers and side stems and tie the stem to a stake or arbor.
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Passiflora caerulea. Vanderbilt University.
He, Xirui et al. Passiflora edulis: An Insight Into Current Researches on Phytochemistry and Pharmacology.Frontiers In Pharmacology, 11,617, 2020, doi:10.3389/fphar.2020.00617