

by - written on 26/04/11 (Very useful, 132 readings)
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As I look out over my garden, I can't see the best plant of all and that is our lovely Wisteria which is in full bloom and looking its best. It also smells divine and I love to walk the garden path next to the house just to catch a noseful. Ahhhhhh! When we moved to our current newly converted barn almost 5 years ago, the ... Read the complete review

by - written on 12/01/11 (Very useful, 222 readings)
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Wisterias are beautiful climbing plants from the pea family, a relationship revealed most obviously in spring, when they produce abundant, falling clusters of distinctive sweet-pea-flower shaped blossoms, usually in some shade of lilac or purple. The pea-green leaves grow as a series of paired, rounded leaflets coming off a central ... Read the complete review

by - written on 10/02/07 (Very useful, 541 readings)
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What better, when you look out and see snow on the ground, than to think of Spring and the flowers that come with it. Wisteria has to be one of the most attractive of climbing plants and one that I wanted to grow from the time I first saw it. There are two main types of this plant – the Chinese: Wisteria Sinesis and the ... Read the complete review

by - written on 25/04/04, updated on 25/04/04 (Very useful, 2625 readings)
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Wisteria is one of the most prettiest climbing plants you can put in your garden. They can be bought from your local garden centres for around £5.00 for a small plant, but I find that if your into looking at the bootsales then this is the time to go there and find whatever plants you might need to brighten up your garden at a ... Read the complete review

by - written on 28/05/01, updated on 28/05/01 (Very useful, 530 readings)
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Wisterias are beautiful climbing plants with flower colours that range from white to deepest purple. They can be grown against a wall, house or other, or trained into a tree. if you opt to train into a tree you must make absolutely certain that the tree is mature and strong enough to take the weight of a wisteria in full sail. ... Read the complete review

by - written on 12/01/01, updated on 12/01/01 (Very useful, 1713 readings)
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This has to be one of the most beautiful climbers there is, as I am sure anyone who is remotely interested in gardening would tell you. What they might not tell you though is just how hardy this plant is. I have one growing over a garage and after being burgled one year I'm afraid I took the secateurs and choppers to it and ... Read the complete review
