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thunbergia alata การใช้

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  • Black-eyed Susan vine ( Thunbergia alata)
  • Black-eyed Susan vine ( Thunbergia alata ) is another good plant for small trellises or baskets.
  • _Thunbergia alata ( black-eyed susan vine ) : fast-growing perennial grown as annual; may survive mild winters.
  • The bright, pure all-orange flowers distinguish it from the related black-eyed Susan ( " Thunbergia alata " ).
  • Black-eyed Susan vine ( Thunbergia alata ) is a tropical plant with 1-inch orange or white flowers with rounded petals and dark centers.
  • Black-eyed Susan vine ( Thunbergia alata ) : This easygoing vine has 1 1 / 2-inch yellow blooms with five petals and a contrasting eye.
  • The black-eyed Susan vine ( Thunbergia alata ) is a root-hardy vine that freezes back in a cold winter but remains evergreen in one as mild as'97-' 98.
  • The Nursery and Garden Industry in Australia promoted " P . pandorana " as a native alternative to the invasive garden climber Black-eyed Susan ( " Thunbergia alata " ).
  • In addition to the bougainvillea and passionflower you mentioned, you might consider the black-eyed Susan vine ( " Thunbergia alata " ), also called clock vine, a root-hardy vine when mulched.
  • These will wither with the onset of hot weather, at which time you should replant with heat-tolerant warm-season annuals such as zonal geraniums, marigolds, black-eyed Susan vine ( Thunbergia alata ) and petunias.
  • _Black-eyed Susan vine ( Thunbergia alata ) : This old-fashioned vine has 1 1 / 2-inch yellow blooms with five petals and a contrasting eye . ` Susie Mix'has yellow, orange and white blooms.
  • Vines for the patio garden include butterfly vine ( Mascagnia macroptera ), which produces yellow blooms followed by chartreuse seed pods that turn a golden brown and resemble butterflies, and black-eyed Susan vine ( Thunbergia alata ), which produces yellow, orange or cream blooms, often with a contrasting eye.
  • Thunbergia alata, or black-eyed Susan vine, that little, orange, round-petaled sweetie with a black dot in its center; pale green cobaea, or cup-and-saucer vine; and others I couldn't identify _ extended clear down the length of the greenhouse, from a pole about 20 feet up, right down to my feet.