เข้าสู่ระบบ สมัครสมาชิก

cypress vine การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • What is the Latin for cypress vine, and where can we find it?
  • The cypress vine is a hybrid, with the cardinal climber as one parent.
  • Popular varieties in contemporary western cultivation include moonflower, the cypress vine, and the cardinal climber.
  • The owner told us it was cypress vine, and that the Latin name was Ipomoea quamoclit.
  • If the latter, cypress vine would be Quamoclit pennata, your vine, Q . multifida, and so on.
  • Q . Can I pinch the end of the cypress vine to encourage side shoots to develop?
  • Thomas Jefferson grew cypress vine at Monticello.
  • Other members of the Ipomoea family produce flowers, including Morning Glory, Moonflowers, Blue Dawn and Cypress Vine.
  • Ipomoea quamoclit has leaves that are more divided, resembling a pine bough, and look more like a cypress vine.
  • A . The cypress vine ( Ipomoea quamoclit ) and the common morning glory ( I . tricolor ) are cousins.
  • Your I . x multifida is sometimes called cypress vine; I . quamoclit is occasionally known as crimson glory; and both are sold as cardinal climber.
  • It is a more robust plant, with thicker stems, longer growth ( to 20 feet ) and slightly larger, bright red flowers, like those of the cypress vine.
  • The word " cypress " is also used as a descriptor for the angiosperm vine in the bindweed family Convolvulaceae, known as the cypress vine ( " Ipomoea quamoclit " ).
  • Also eye-catching, though its flowers are relatively small, is the cypress vine ( I . quamoclit ) with ferny foliage dotted with red, pink or white blossoms from late spring to late autumn.
  • Cypress vine ( Ipomoea quamoclit ) : A type of morning glory, this old-fashioned annual vine has cardinal red tubular flowers that remain open all day and are a favorite with butterflies and hummingbirds.
  • _Cypress vine ( Ipomoea quamoclit ) : A type of morning glory, this old-fashioned, twining 15-to 20-foot annual vine has cardinal red tubular flowers that remain open all day and are a favorite with butterflies and hummingbirds.
  • Looking at both gardens, you see the same plants, many of which started in one or the other and were shared : Jerusalem cherry, begonia, azalea, ginger lily, canna lily, day lily, burning bush, cypress vine, rose of Sharon, four o'clocks, roses, dahlias, trees galore and so much more.
  • Guineagrass, chamberbitter, phyllanthus, southern crabgrass, yellow nutsedge and dogfennel rise robustly out of the formerly mulched-and-maintained planting beds and walkways; bindweed, Virginia creeper and cypress vine strangle fenceposts and tomato cages with their twirling embrace; and some weeds-- sandspurs, beggerticks, spiny amaranth and stinging nettle-- fight back when their livelihood is threatened.
  • I content myself with the reality of my climate : moonflowers encircling the sun-room windows in late summer; Cypress vine and Mina lobata twining along and up the wood fence that hides my pots and tools; the fragrance of my espalier witch hazel in January, and the Belgian fence I will build one year, intertwining pear and apple trees to form a privacy screen.