There is a blue/purple flower that looks like sweet pea but does not grow on a vine it grows on a stem?
Joey
2013-06-03 16:08:53 UTC
About 24in high has about 12 flowers per stem what is its name
Three answers:
satyaprakash
2016-12-26 17:03:22 UTC
I made the errors of growing to be vines on my cedar siding as quickly as; undesirable theory. I had to cut the full ingredient down when I repainted, plus scrape each and all the little suckers off that clung to the abode. i do no longer see a situation with planting vines on concrete nonetheless. Honeysuckle won't artwork besides the incontrovertible fact that, except this is given a help. And it gets woody so it needs an incredibly sturdy help. attempt the yellow/white sort; this is the main aromatic, and does not look services to powdery mould. Trumpet vine might artwork properly on concrete. It sends out little suckers which will dangle to something with some texture. It takes a number of years to truly get going, yet whilst it starts blooming, you would be rewarded with hummingbirds. i admire the assumption of a number of differents varieties of vines planted alternately; clematis paniculata (candy Autumn) is yet an alternate determination you're interested in. this is going to strengthen a sturdy ten feet or extra a 365 days if planted in finished sunlight. My sister has it growing to be up the bricks of her storage.
Karen L
2013-06-03 16:19:47 UTC
Rough guess here, because you didn't say where you saw it or if it's in bloom right now. Could be a lupin, also spelled lupine. They are just starting to bloom here on Vancouver Island and the wild ones are blue/purple. They are, in fact, from the same family as a sweet pea.
?
2013-06-03 16:46:30 UTC
If it is growing wild it could be a lupine or some other member of the pea family. Is it growing wild or in a garden? For a more positive ID we would need to see a picture.
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