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  2. Grow These Shade-Loving Plants in the Darkest Corners ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/grow-shade-loving-plants-darkest...

    This plant will grow in partial shade as long as the soil does not dry out, so don’t forget to water it. Hardiness zones: 5 to 9 Growing conditions: Partial shade and consistently moist soil.

  3. These Beautiful Flowering Vines Will Elevate Any Garden ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/beautiful-flowering-vines-elevate...

    The best flowering vines will beautify any garden and often attract pollinators. Here are the best annual and perennial wall-climbing vines to grow. ... while partial sun is about half that. Make ...

  4. Add Magic to Your Garden with These Enchanting Flowering Vines

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/prettiest-flowering-vines...

    Growing flowering vines adds instant character, charm, and color to your home and garden. Try these climbers on a fence, trellis, pergola, or mailbox.

  5. Antigonon leptopus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigonon_leptopus

    Antigonon leptopus is a fast-growing climbing vine that holds on via tendrils, and is able to reach over 7 metres in length. It has cordate (heart-shaped), sometimes triangular leaves 25 to 75 mm long. The flowers are borne in panicles, clustered along the rachis. Producing pink or white flowers from spring to autumn, it forms underground ...

  6. Clematis terniflora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clematis_terniflora

    Prefers full sun, but will flower in partial shade. These woody-stemmed plants can be pruned in fall or early spring to within a couple of feet of the ground, and will vine up fence, trellis, arbors (or other plants) to heights of 10 to 30 feet. Clematis ternifolia can also be allowed to sprawl along the ground as a dense ground cover. Blooms ...

  7. Actinidia arguta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Actinidia_arguta

    Each vine can grow up to 20 ft in a single season, given ideal growing conditions. [13] For commercial planting, placement is important: plants can tolerate partial shade, but yields are optimized with full sunlight. Hardy kiwi vines consume large volumes of water; therefore, they are usually grown in well-drained, acidic soils to prevent root rot.