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Happy wanderer vine
Happy wanderer vine










Hardenbergia violacea is well worth a spot in your garden, especially to hide a fence or structure, with its mass of flowers in winter spring. It grows to about a metre by a metre and has a mass of purple flowers in winter spring. Recent breeding has actually developed some upright shrubby forms including Hardenbergia 'Purple Clusters'. Hardenbergia violacea Happy Wanderer Happy Wanderer Purple Lilac Vine An evergeen, shrubby vine with long and pendulous clusters of purple-pink, sweet pea.

happy wanderer vine happy wanderer vine

But there is also a pale pink form called Hardenbergia 'Rosea' which is just exquisite with its soft pink colour, and there is a pure white form as well called Hardenbergia 'Alba'. The slow-growing evergreens can be trained as screens on trellises, walls or fences, or used as ground covers. Probably the most widely grown variety in Australia is Hardenbergia violacea 'Happy Wanderer'. These twining or shrubby vines are graced with spikes of small pea-shaped flowers that bloom in winter or early spring. But for compact growth and an even fence coverage prune regularly after flowering. Like many evergreen climbers, it has a tendency to run up a wall or fence and ball at the top and be leggy below. It’s a tough little number in the pea family from eastern Australia that lays low all year, unnoticed, in hard-scrabble conditions in chain-link-fenced yards, then bursts into improbably purple bloom late winter. Hardenbergia violacea Happy Wanderer (Purple Vine Lilac) - An evergreen vine that climbs by twining stems to 12-16 feet.

#Happy wanderer vine full#

It flowers better in full sun and it needs well drained soil and preferably likes a frost free site, although it tolerates some frost. This smallish evergreen vine, also known as the Happy Wanderer, is in bloom around town, always a surprising sight for February. Plant in sun or light shade in hot inland. Pinkish-purple flowers with a chartreuse spot in center cascade like small Wisteria blossoms in the winter to early spring.

happy wanderer vine

Simple, oblong (2-4 inches) leaves clothe these stems. Hardenbergia likes a sunny or semi shaded position. 'Hardenbergia violacea 'Happy Wanderer' (Purple Vine Lilac) - An evergreen vine that climbs by twining stems to 12-16 feet. There are three species in Australia, growing in areas from Queensland to Tasmania. The Hardenbergia genus is a member of the pea flower subfamily of the legume family and was named after Franziska Countess von Hardenberg. It's a wonderful Australian native plant also known as False Sarsaparilla, or Purple Coral Pea. Lilac Vine - Hardenbergia Violacea 'Happy Wanderer' - Desert Horizon Nursery Lilac Vine Hardenbergia Violacea Lilac Vine Hardenbergia Violacea is an evergreen vine perfectly suited to climate here in Phoenix, where it is most frequently spotted scrambling over rocky banks, using any neighboring trees and shrubs for upward support. For a hardy, evergreen, twining, woody stemmed climber, which has dark green leathery leaves and produces a mass of dark purple pea flowers in winter spring look no further than Hardenbergia violacea.










Happy wanderer vine