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February 24, 2018 By Jo Ellen Meyers Sharp

Clematis growing tips from collector with 2,000 Queen of the Vines

‘Etiole Violette’ clematis. Photo courtesy Monrovia.com

There are collectors and then there are collectors. Deborah Hardwick falls into the latter category with 2,000 clematises at her central Ohio property called the Hardwick Hall Collection.

She shared her knowledge at last September’s Plant Trial Day at the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden. For instance, she disabused me and I’m certain others of some myths regarding the care of the plant known as Queen of the Vines.

For one thing, she told us we could prune or cut back the side shoots of clematis to reduce its size whenever needed. That’s such a relief since zealots want us to know the “pruning group” of clematis because taking nips and tucks. See the International Clematis Society for more about these groups and pruning techniques.

Other Hardwick tips:

  • Buy two or three of the same clematis variety and plant them together.
  • Plant clematis in a hole 18 inches deep and 15 inches wide, with soil that is well drained.
  • Snip off spent flower early in the season, then cut the plant back by half mid-season.
  • In fall, cut large plants back again to tidy the plant for winter and reduce seeds.
  • In spring, cut back hard, or to just above a set of fat buds.
  • Keep clematis watered during the growing season. She recommends 2-inches a week.
  • Don’t use high-nitrogen fertilizers. Use a fertilizer with a slightly higher middle number.

Clematis pitcheri. (C) Chris Evans, University of Illinois/Bugwood.org

Hardwick has spent 20 years studying, collecting, growing and now hybridizing clematis. She said she searches for varieties that are easy to establish, have strong stems, flowers that are colorful and durable, tolerate hot weather and are hardy to USDA Zone 5. Here’s her list of the 10 best:

  • ‘Alionushka’ ( integrifolia), a trailer with 3-inch pendulous flowers.
  • viorna and related hybrids, bell-shaped blooms and native to the southeast U.S.
  • ‘Mrs. Harvey’ ( integrifolia), trails with three to four months of bloom.
  • ‘China Surprise’ ( heraclefolia), large leaves and is a bee magnet.
  • ‘Princess Kate’, slow to establish, but non-stop bloomer.
  • C. pitcheri and related hybrids, clustered blooms, native in the Midwest.
  • ‘Alita’, rebloomer, a Raymond Evison brand.
  • ‘Etiole Violette’, non-stop bloomer.
  • ‘Margaret Hunt’, compact.
  • ‘Sundance’, mound grower.

I know some of these will be hard to find at local garden centers. Of all of them, the only one I’ve ever seen is ‘Etiole Violette’.

And the native ones may be downright near impossible. For those, consider shopping native plant sales, such as the Indiana Native Plant and Wildflower Society’s May 12, or check out NativePlantsUnlimited.com. PlantDelights.com has the Pottawatomie variety of C. pitcheri.

BrushwoodNursery.com and GardenCrossings.com are mail order retailers that specialize in different types of clematis.

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