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Look how pretty our wisteria is this year. (Original Post) Croney May 2021 OP
How beautiful! Sure looks fantastic. ♥ CaliforniaPeggy May 2021 #1
Gorgeous! hlthe2b May 2021 #2
That is lovely! hermetic May 2021 #3
Wow! Nt spooky3 May 2021 #4
That's so beautiful! Where is that? XanaDUer2 May 2021 #5
Our yard in Massachusetts. Croney May 2021 #7
Why, I didn't know you Yankees had such nice Wisteria. I thought it was a Southern speciality. Chainfire May 2021 #9
We got no Confederate nuthin'. Croney May 2021 #10
Well Good! I guess the carpet bag was full! ;) Chainfire May 2021 #13
It grows well here in Mr.Bill May 2021 #12
When visiting Berkeley, California PhylliPretzel May 2021 #26
Yep! I have one here that is trying it's very best to strangle my one of my redwoods. It's The_REAL_Ecumenist May 2021 #43
I'm in Lake County and about 25 years ago we rented Mr.Bill May 2021 #46
Howdy, Sorta kinda neighbor! Yep, we bought this place about 11 yrs ago but I was Dx w/stage 4B The_REAL_Ecumenist May 2021 #52
Thank you!:) True Blue American May 2021 #58
We have magnolias and honeysuckle in southern half of Minnesota. pazzyanne May 2021 #17
Minnesota, that is a Canadian province, right? Chainfire May 2021 #18
You got that right! pazzyanne May 2021 #19
I lived one year in Chicago. Chainfire May 2021 #25
Not a southerner BUT you are saying what I always tell people- it ALWAYS works in your favor when The_REAL_Ecumenist May 2021 #44
Wisteria grows in lots of places. It's a tough bugger. paleotn May 2021 #22
I was going to ask where it was too. Ours bloomed a few weeks ago. Maybe a month ago. raccoon May 2021 #33
Here in Western MA, the leaves are just starting to open TheRickles May 2021 #47
That is beautiful. I love the plant. Chainfire May 2021 #6
Oh no. What a loss. Croney May 2021 #8
I don't understand how people can do that Hekate May 2021 #29
I'd have NJCher May 2021 #36
Gorgeous! SheltieLover May 2021 #11
My mom was always railing about the horrors of wisteria bucolic_frolic May 2021 #14
It can be really invasive. Pinback May 2021 #66
Beautiful. Ellipsis May 2021 #15
absolutely lovely! glad you told him to keep those clippers to himself. lol! nt orleans May 2021 #16
Huh? Where's the green leaves? It's just all blossom? Has Laura PourMeADrink May 2021 #20
Oh yes, it has leaves, and has blossomed for 20 years. Croney May 2021 #24
It's so weird how they are all so different. Like I see almost Laura PourMeADrink May 2021 #50
omg i planted mine in 1995 and never bloomed..never really grew either :( samnsara May 2021 #35
Wow... The longest first blooming listed was like 20 years. Wild that Laura PourMeADrink May 2021 #48
A planet overgrown with lovely plants and greens thanks to lower pollution from pandemic. joetheman May 2021 #21
Wow! Love it! NurseJackie May 2021 #23
I have a love / hate relationship with wisteria. paleotn May 2021 #27
BEWARE! Dangerous beauty - Worse than kudzu CommonHumanity May 2021 #60
Beautiful! Rarely do I see wisteria here in SoCal on the coast, but there was a random patch... Hekate May 2021 #28
There is a little landscaped park in Ojai, MoonchildCA May 2021 #59
That is so beautiful! FlowingWater May 2021 #30
That is a sweet setting wendyb-NC May 2021 #31
When they say a plant (like wisteria) only blooms on old growth, vanlassie May 2021 #32
Im so jealous! i planted wisteria next to the house when i first moved here in 1995..never bloomed. samnsara May 2021 #34
Yes! Maybe it just wants a different view. Croney May 2021 #45
Those flowers look a lot like the lilacs we have in our back yard..... George II May 2021 #37
Lovely! They do look similar. Croney May 2021 #51
lovely. AllaN01Bear May 2021 #38
Heaven, lucky you! appalachiablue May 2021 #39
Lovely! Demsrule86 May 2021 #40
That back yard has character Aussie105 May 2021 #41
Such a glorious bloom of wisteria on your pergola... electric_blue68 May 2021 #42
Thanks! Here's a view from the other side. Croney May 2021 #49
Breathtaking! Trueblue Texan May 2021 #53
Just gorgeous! niyad May 2021 #54
That is so lovely ☺️ Olafjoy May 2021 #55
What a wonderful place for a morning coffee and bagel GeoWilliam750 May 2021 #56
Lucky you to have such beautiful wisteria mnhtnbb May 2021 #57
An exquisite oasis! The Wisteria is stunning. MLAA May 2021 #61
Wow seta1950 May 2021 #62
Beautiful seta1950 May 2021 #63
so THAT'S a wisteria certainot May 2021 #64
Gorgeous!!! BobTheSubgenius May 2021 #65

hermetic

(8,614 posts)
3. That is lovely!
Sun May 16, 2021, 05:03 PM
May 2021

I've noticed the lilac bushes around here are looking quite flowerful this year. Wish I had wisteria, though.

 

Chainfire

(17,757 posts)
9. Why, I didn't know you Yankees had such nice Wisteria. I thought it was a Southern speciality.
Sun May 16, 2021, 05:11 PM
May 2021

I guess the next thing you will tell me is that you have Magnolias, Honeysuckle and Confederate Jasmine! Y'all just took everything when you left.

 

Chainfire

(17,757 posts)
13. Well Good! I guess the carpet bag was full! ;)
Sun May 16, 2021, 05:28 PM
May 2021

The Confederate jasmine grows wild here. It has beautiful yellow flowers and the smell is intoxicating. I have been trying to get it to grow on my back yard fence. I don't know why it is Confederate Jasmine, but it fits in well with all the right-wingers around me.

PhylliPretzel

(144 posts)
26. When visiting Berkeley, California
Sun May 16, 2021, 06:40 PM
May 2021

in 1957, I saw wisteria for the first time. The many trunks were supported by a wooden pergola which covered a large church courtyard; it was filled with so many gorgeous purple blooms that it shaded the entire courtyard. I was awed with its beauty!

The_REAL_Ecumenist

(856 posts)
43. Yep! I have one here that is trying it's very best to strangle my one of my redwoods. It's
Sun May 16, 2021, 08:05 PM
May 2021

beautiful in the spring but man, is it a messy thing, constantly dropping it leaves all over the patio mnost of the year compunded by the dead flowers after the heavy spring bloom. I love it though. I'm just north of the capital near the edge of Sacramento & Sutter counties.

Mr.Bill

(24,762 posts)
46. I'm in Lake County and about 25 years ago we rented
Sun May 16, 2021, 08:16 PM
May 2021

a house that had it growing all over a pergola over our deck and front door. The shade was nice and it looked beautiful, but it was a lot of work. At least once a year I had to trim it way back or we would not have been able to get to our front door. The trimmings filled a pickup truck bed. If I wasn't renting and I owned the place I would have cut it back a lot more but the landlord didn't want me to do that.

The_REAL_Ecumenist

(856 posts)
52. Howdy, Sorta kinda neighbor! Yep, we bought this place about 11 yrs ago but I was Dx w/stage 4B
Sun May 16, 2021, 08:31 PM
May 2021

cancer about 5 months later. The idiots who "landscaped" the yard thought it made sense to it on one of the patios to let it grow over the pergola but, honey! This thing is a monster from outer space and fighting cancer added with Bae working all the overtime he could equalled having the yard look like hell. Won the war but now trimming Norcal's version of the Ho Chi Minh trail begins.

BTW, I'll soon be your neighbor from the northwest. Looking for large acreage to your northwest. Humboldt county. Already have anout 25 acres in the paskenta area west of Corning.

pazzyanne

(6,599 posts)
17. We have magnolias and honeysuckle in southern half of Minnesota.
Sun May 16, 2021, 06:08 PM
May 2021

That thanks due to people working to develop magnolia that will grow in Zones 4 and 5.

 

Chainfire

(17,757 posts)
18. Minnesota, that is a Canadian province, right?
Sun May 16, 2021, 06:14 PM
May 2021

Y'all may get the plants, but you will never get the drawl!

 

Chainfire

(17,757 posts)
25. I lived one year in Chicago.
Sun May 16, 2021, 06:35 PM
May 2021

My strong Southern accent was an albatross that followed me everywhere I went. People who talked like I did were assumed to be idiots.....After I figured that out, I used it to my advantage and played it to the hilt. There is no advantage like having your enemies underestimate your abilities!

The_REAL_Ecumenist

(856 posts)
44. Not a southerner BUT you are saying what I always tell people- it ALWAYS works in your favor when
Sun May 16, 2021, 08:13 PM
May 2021

folks believe you're stupid because they'll NEVER expect you to be strategic or outflank them. It's doubly in your favor is they're stupid AF, (you know, kind of like the latest iterration of the GQP). IDIOTS! They're EASILY defeated with a conspiracy theory spread with a poison pill in it for their own party. Only need to make sure that it seemingly comes from someone who appears to one of their own and sounds b@t$h!t crazily in line with the lastest qanon insanity.

You, my friend, are MY kind of people!



paleotn

(19,123 posts)
22. Wisteria grows in lots of places. It's a tough bugger.
Sun May 16, 2021, 06:30 PM
May 2021

Too tough sometimes. It can become invasive if not kept in check.

raccoon

(31,431 posts)
33. I was going to ask where it was too. Ours bloomed a few weeks ago. Maybe a month ago.
Sun May 16, 2021, 07:09 PM
May 2021

I was going to ask where it was too. Ours bloomed a few weeks ago. Maybe a month ago. In SC.

Beautiful plant. I love the smell of the blossoms too.

TheRickles

(2,382 posts)
47. Here in Western MA, the leaves are just starting to open
Sun May 16, 2021, 08:18 PM
May 2021

It'll be a few weeks before our flowers look like yours (not quite as bountiful, though!).

 

Chainfire

(17,757 posts)
6. That is beautiful. I love the plant.
Sun May 16, 2021, 05:09 PM
May 2021

A few years ago, an old house changed hands in the small town near me. In the front yard was Wisteria that was so old that its main stem was nearly 30" in diameter. It was a Wisteria "tree." Not long after the new owners moved in, they cut it down and removed the stump. To me, it felt like a crime.

bucolic_frolic

(46,816 posts)
14. My mom was always railing about the horrors of wisteria
Sun May 16, 2021, 05:42 PM
May 2021

I think related to uprooting sidewalks and foundations or crawling all over a house.

I've never seen one before. Beautiful!

Pinback

(12,869 posts)
66. It can be really invasive.
Mon May 17, 2021, 01:37 PM
May 2021

I've had to remove tons of it from my yard, because if allowed to run amok it will choke just about everything else out, although the aroma is lovely in early spring.

For people with the time, patience, and discipline to train it and keep it pruned, wisteria can be a beautiful plant, as Croney's OP illustrates. Of course, that's in Massachusetts, where winter temps probably keep it line better than here in Georgia.

 

Laura PourMeADrink

(42,770 posts)
20. Huh? Where's the green leaves? It's just all blossom? Has
Sun May 16, 2021, 06:26 PM
May 2021

It ever blossomed before? I posted a while back that we had had ours for 19 yrs and all of sudden it bloomed. Just green leaves before then.

Croney

(4,918 posts)
24. Oh yes, it has leaves, and has blossomed for 20 years.
Sun May 16, 2021, 06:33 PM
May 2021

It was only last year that it decided to take the year off to hibernate and play dead. Toward late summer it did show green but there wasn't time to blossom before winter.

 

Laura PourMeADrink

(42,770 posts)
50. It's so weird how they are all so different. Like I see almost
Sun May 16, 2021, 08:22 PM
May 2021

zero green in that pic. Blooms amazing.

 

Laura PourMeADrink

(42,770 posts)
48. Wow... The longest first blooming listed was like 20 years. Wild that
Sun May 16, 2021, 08:20 PM
May 2021

It didn't grow either. Sorry you got a bum wisteria.

 

joetheman

(1,450 posts)
21. A planet overgrown with lovely plants and greens thanks to lower pollution from pandemic.
Sun May 16, 2021, 06:29 PM
May 2021

It's happening all over the world. Growth seldom seen before and low pollution is the reason. The pollution is picking up once again so enjoy the growth while it lasts.

paleotn

(19,123 posts)
27. I have a love / hate relationship with wisteria.
Sun May 16, 2021, 06:47 PM
May 2021

Beautiful flowers in spring like yours. Years ago when we lived in NC, wisteria had naturalized on our back property over who knows how many decades into a tangled mess. Over the first 5 or so years we owned the place the best we could do was fight it to an uneasy truce. Wisteria is beautiful, but also a tough bugger down south. Not as oppressive as kudzu, but close.

CommonHumanity

(280 posts)
60. BEWARE! Dangerous beauty - Worse than kudzu
Mon May 17, 2021, 09:06 AM
May 2021

I live in NC and make my income through my targeted grazing business (goats eating unwanted vegetation). We can eliminate kudzu in one season through repeat grazing. Kudzu is a tuber. By regrazing each time the plant's leaves grow to 75% of their full size we can exhaust the tuber/deplete its reserves. Wisteria on the other hand....there is one patch that is just now dying after 4 years of grazing.

I do consultations for people prior to contracting with them for our services and I cannot tell you the number of beautiful forest areas and hardwood trees that I have seen destroyed by wisteria. Literally hundreds. I also cannot tell you the number of residential yards we see that are carpeted by wisteria. We can often trace the growth back to the first ornamental planting installed years ago. Often the first plant was installed in a "perfect" spot. Perhaps beside a pergola or garden feature. Through the passage of time, the garden was neglected, the house was sold or left vacant or the property was simply sold to people who did not know that wisteria must be carefully controlled.

Maybe the risk is not as bad in more northern areas, but given the damage to native forests that I see on a daily basis, I would outlaw the sale of wisteria in any location where it grows easily and abundantly. I often describe it to my customers as the epitome of dangerous beauty.

Hekate

(94,473 posts)
28. Beautiful! Rarely do I see wisteria here in SoCal on the coast, but there was a random patch...
Sun May 16, 2021, 06:50 PM
May 2021

...in Santa Barbara, hanging directly over the 101 freeway. I used to look for it every spring while I was in SB. Beats me how it got there or how it survived, but it was a treat. Enjoy!

MoonchildCA

(1,344 posts)
59. There is a little landscaped park in Ojai,
Mon May 17, 2021, 08:17 AM
May 2021

...called Cluff Park, which has a long arbor over a walkway, covered in Wisteria.

vanlassie

(5,899 posts)
32. When they say a plant (like wisteria) only blooms on old growth,
Sun May 16, 2021, 07:02 PM
May 2021

I get confused how to prune it. I pruned mine hard a couple years ago and it barely bloomed the next year.

samnsara

(18,281 posts)
34. Im so jealous! i planted wisteria next to the house when i first moved here in 1995..never bloomed.
Sun May 16, 2021, 07:21 PM
May 2021

..then the vines grew through my cedar siding and we tried to kill it as it can really cause damage when next to a house. Chopped it up chopped it down..now its trying to come back to life. IF i resurrect it.. should I try transplanting it in another area?

George II

(67,782 posts)
37. Those flowers look a lot like the lilacs we have in our back yard.....
Sun May 16, 2021, 07:31 PM
May 2021

Are wisteria and lilacs related? Here's what we wake up to in the morning, but they're almost gone (they only last about 3-4 weeks):

Aussie105

(6,208 posts)
41. That back yard has character
Sun May 16, 2021, 07:51 PM
May 2021

that only comes with age!

Grows well here in Adelaide, South Australia too.

I planted one, trained it on a trellis - then moved home. 8-(

Hope the new owners kept it, should be 30 years old by now.



Wisteria arch at the local botanic gardens.

electric_blue68

(17,796 posts)
42. Such a glorious bloom of wisteria on your pergola...
Sun May 16, 2021, 08:03 PM
May 2021

while there are gorgeous pergola wisterias, blooming in NYC's Brooklyn Botanical Garden, on a building in Wave Hill's Garden Park, and along the western fence of the NY (Bronx) Botanical Garden - you might be surprised to find at times...

beautiful wisteria growing up 4, 5 stories high on some of our older apartment buildings - at least in The West Village in the past (not been on those particular streets in several years). I was visiting that area frequently for decades, and pass it at that time of year! 💖

Glad yours didn't get cut. Enjoy!

Croney

(4,918 posts)
49. Thanks! Here's a view from the other side.
Sun May 16, 2021, 08:21 PM
May 2021

My husband built all structures and paths and he is in charge of weeding and planting. Garden going in now. It's been great during Covid that he can work in the yard.

mnhtnbb

(32,020 posts)
57. Lucky you to have such beautiful wisteria
Mon May 17, 2021, 04:28 AM
May 2021

in your yard.

I was in France in April several years ago and the wisteria was just knockout gorgeous everywhere. Here in the south it grows wild, but it wasn't terribly pretty this year.

seta1950

(937 posts)
63. Beautiful
Mon May 17, 2021, 11:39 AM
May 2021

There is one in Sierra Madre Ca. that is considered one of the 7 horticultural wonders of the world, it weighs 250 tons and spreads across an acre between 2 houses

BobTheSubgenius

(11,775 posts)
65. Gorgeous!!!
Mon May 17, 2021, 01:06 PM
May 2021

I just love wisteria, but I don't really have anywhere for it to climb. I had the opp. to get a ton of lumber for a ridiculous price and wanted to make a pergola, but my wife was having none of that.

You have a very peaceful-looking yard!

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